a grid-tied inverter would spend the first day of this example totally offline.

This issue is different from keeping the frequency within it's regulated limits. It's keeping the average frequency very precisely constant, which is expensive as they say, and probably not important.

Frequency could actually be used to signal the price of electricity very cheaply (low frequency means a system under high load and high prices, whereas high Hz= low price). This would be more useful than keeping time with clocks, and could help to enable the grid to deal with the future demands of variable renewable inputs and limited, expensive electricity availability. Loads that turns off at low Hz and others that turn on with high Hz could be very good for the grid.
--
Hugh Piggott

Scoraig
http://www.scoraigwind.co.uk
_______________________________________________
List sponsored by Home Power magazine

List Address: [email protected]

Options & settings:
http://lists.re-wrenches.org/options.cgi/re-wrenches-re-wrenches.org

List-Archive: http://lists.re-wrenches.org/pipermail/re-wrenches-re-wrenches.org

List rules & etiquette:
www.re-wrenches.org/etiquette.htm

Check out participant bios:
www.members.re-wrenches.org

Reply via email to