I don’t have an AIO but suspect that the software’s the same as for my 3.6 kW Gen 3 inverter.
I suspect that the real issue is that we’ve all been seduced by how well Eco mode works and haven’t recognised that when we set up a charge period or a discharge period, we are, in effect, disabling Eco mode.
I don’t have experience with discharge periods but do have experience with charge periods.
It looks to me as though during a charge period we’re instructing the system to charge the battery at the specified fixed rate. If there’s PV available (i.e. PV exceeds the Load - the first priority for PV is meeting Load), it will use it. If there isn’t enough PV, it will make up the difference from the grid. Once the battery gets to the specified charge level, charging stops. Throughout a charge period (including after the target charge has been reached), the battery is prevented from discharging.
I would expect discharge periods to mean that the battery is discharged at the specified discharge rate until the reserve % is reached, when discharging will stop. Throughout a discharge period, the battery will be prevented from charging.
The great thing about Eco mode is that it adjusts the charge/discharge rate dynamically to match what’s going on, i.e. how much PV is available and what the Load is. When you turn that off, you’re back in an earlier world.
If I could influence GivEnergy’s software development programme, I would ask them to give priority to making charge and discharge periods work more as Eco mode does; in particular
- during a charge period, continue to accept surplus PV (i.e. the excess PV which isn’t being used to meet Load) after the target AC charge level has been reached
This one change would make an enormous difference. It would allow charge periods to be used during the day to “top-up” the charge to some level from the grid before the start of the 4 - 7 pm period of premium pricing. You can define a charge period from, say, 2 - 4 pm now but if you do so, once 2 pm is reached, the system will charge at the specified rate from PV + grid until the battery reaches the target charge and then disable all further charging. That’s not what I want.
Let’s suppose you want to have 50% charge at 4 pm. Then you would define a charge period from 2 - 4 pm and specify the target AC charge level as 50%. If the battery is already charged to 40% at 2 pm, it would charge using a mix of PV and grid until the charge reaches 50%. It would then stop taking electricity from the grid (because the 50% AC target has been reached) but would continue taking surplus PV which isn’t being consumed as Load.
In your case I suspect you’re aiming for 100% charge at 4 pm. You will presumably charge up as much as you can in the overnight off-peak period. What you then want to do is to harvest as much PV as you can during the day while hitting peak charge at 4 pm. Let’s suppose that the maximum charge rate to your battery is 25% / hour. Then what I envisage (assuming they’ve changed how charge periods work) is that you would set up the following charge periods:
- 12:00 - 13:00 Charge Period2: AC Charge Upper SOC % Limit = 25%
- 13:00 - 14:00 Charge Period3: AC Charge Upper SOC % Limit = 50%
- 14:00 - 15:00 Charge Period4: AC Charge Upper SOC % Limit = 75%
- 15:00 - 16:00 Charge Period5: AC Charge Upper SOC % Limit = 100%
These periods mimic the charge profile which you need to get the battery from empty to full in the least time. It would mean that you would be charging only from surplus PV between the end of the off-peak period and midday. During that period you would be able to meet Load both from PV direct and from the battery. But once you got beyond midday you would be in a charge period, which would disable discharge. If you had at least 25% charge then, you wouldn’t start charging until you got to 1 pm, when the minimum charge level is raised to 50%. At each hour the charge level rises (but so may your charge level - because you’re continuing to accept surplus PV), so it’s only when the charge level is lower than the threshold that that you start “topping-up” the surplus PV from the grid.
As it’s inefficient to discharge the battery during the period of standard-price electricity during the day only to have to charge it up again using standard-price electricity before 4 pm, I would prohibit such discharge by adding a further charge period from the end of the off-peak period until midday. The target AC charge level during this period would be 0%. DO NOT DO THIS NOW - it has the effect of making the battery Idle: it can neither charge nor discharge. But with my proposed change, it would prohibit the battery from discharging while it would continue to be able to receive surplus PV. So the charge periods would be (assuming that you charge from 1 - 4 am):
- 01:00 - 04:00 Charge Period1: AC Charge Upper SOC % Limit = 100%
- 04:00 - 12:00 Charge Period2: AC Charge Upper SOC % Limit = 0%
- 12:00 - 13:00 Charge Period3: AC Charge Upper SOC % Limit = 25%
- 13:00 - 14:00 Charge Period4: AC Charge Upper SOC % Limit = 50%
- 14:00 - 15:00 Charge Period5: AC Charge Upper SOC % Limit = 75%
- 15:00 - 16:00 Charge Period6: AC Charge Upper SOC % Limit = 100%
Note the difference between this and having a single charge period:
- 01:00 - 16:00 Charge Period1: AC Charge Upper SOC % Limit = 100%
This has the effect of charging the battery up to 100% from the grid starting at 01:00 and ending whenever it gets to 100%. This may well be after 04:00, so some of the charging uses standard-price electricity.
My scheme stops charging from the grid when off-peak pricing ends. Between then and 4 pm, the battery would not discharge. But it would continue to receive charge from surplus PV. It would start charging again from the grid if at any hour between midday and 4 pm the charge level lay below the specified threshold. Once that threshold had been reached, say 20 minutes after the hour, grid charging would stop but charging from surplus PV would continue. So the 100% target charge at 4 pm would be met by a mix of off-peak grid electricity, surplus PV and a top-up of standard-price electricity bought during the early minutes of the hours between midday and 4 pm.
This scheme is consistent with the principles of Eco mode and is well within the capabilities of the hardware. I’m disappointed that it’s not how the system works yet. Let’s hope that GivEnergy management recognise that it would really enhance the capabilities of their system and put some software development resources into it.