Following my previous post, I have another request which follows on.
Today's solar inverters all have ethernet ports to connect to the internet.
In the old days, inverters had a screen and a row of buttons to
configure the inverter, stuff like language, country in which it is
operating etc.
might i suggest that in most cases just installing another bt connection and
setting up a vpn is the most reliable way forward.
if a hard link can’t be established, substitute a 5g router.
or just try 2 asus router’ s using 2.4Ghz mesh to create the back bone.
but imo. the 5g with a vpn is
I have a friend with a wireless bridge from central Portsmouth to
Southampton using ubiquity kit... Not cheap, but really robust.
On Wed, 5 Feb 2025, 18:24 Roger Munford via Hampshire, <
hampshire@mailman.lug.org.uk> wrote:
> Thanks everybody for your kind and useful responses.
>
> The project in
See inline:
On Wed, 5 Feb 2025 at 18:53, Roger Munford via Hampshire
wrote:
>
> Following my previous post, I have another request which follows on.
>
> Today's solar inverters all have ethernet ports to connect to the internet.
>
> In the old days, inverters had a screen and a row of buttons to
On Wed, 5 Feb 2025 at 18:24, Roger Munford via Hampshire
wrote:
>
> Thanks everybody for your kind and useful responses.
>
> The project involves two solar installations which are close to each
> other and as generators they are separate. However it appears that for
> monitoring purposes, (equipme
Thanks everybody for your kind and useful responses.
The project involves two solar installations which are close to each
other and as generators they are separate. However it appears that for
monitoring purposes, (equipment manufactures advice) it would be better
to have the two systems integ