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Deye Inverters in Belgium: The Synergrid 170% ‘Cheat Code’ (Oversizing Guide)
Deye Inverters in Belgium: The Synergrid 170% ‘Cheat Code’ (Oversizing Guide)
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Find out how to turn the Deye 8K into a 23.3 kWp power station whilst staying within the Synergrid limit of 10 kVA....

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Energy Autonomy in 2026: Geopolitics, Batteries and Price Arbitrage
Energy Autonomy in 2026: Geopolitics, Batteries and Price Arbitrage
1427 views

In 2026, investing in solar storage is no longer optional: unstable geopolitics, LiFePO4 battery costs divided by 5,...

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Keeping your home powered during a power cut: the hybrid inverter and battery solution
Keeping your home powered during a power cut: the hybrid inverter and battery solution
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Protect your essential devices during power cuts with a hybrid inverter and a solar battery. A practical guide by...

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100% self-sufficient in electricity: is that really possible?
100% self-sufficient in electricity: is that really possible?
587 views

100% self-sufficient with solar power? We explain a realistic approach: solar panels, batteries, a generator and...

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PPE2 2026 Tenders: Complete Guide to Eligibility for Your Solar Panels in France
PPE2 2026 Tenders: Complete Guide to Eligibility for Your Solar Panels in France
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Complete PPE2 2026 guide for photovoltaic installations > 100 kWp: eligibility criteria, ECS carbon footprint,...

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Installation and configuration

The charge controller is the essential component of autonomous solar installations (remote sites, motorhomes, boats). It protects your batteries against overcharging and deep discharge, while optimising charging via an MPPT algorithm.

This sub-category details all the installation steps: secure wiring of panels → regulator → battery, choice of cable sections, setting charge curves according to battery type (Gel, AGM, LiFePO4), and system voltage configuration (12V, 24V, 48V).

Correct wiring: the imperative order. Always connect the battery to the regulator first, then the panels. Reversing this order can destroy the regulator! Use cable cross-sections suitable for the current: minimum 16mm² for 30A over 3m, 25mm² for 50A, 35mm² for 80A. Install DC fuses (class T gPV) no more than 30cm from the battery.

Setting the charge curves. Each type of battery requires specific charging voltages. LiFePO4 batteries require 14.4V (4x3.6V) in bulk, 13.8V in float for 12V systems. Gel batteries charge at 14.1V max, AGM batteries at 14.4V. Our guides detail the optimal settings for each technology, with summary tables.

Discover advanced features too: temperature compensation (crucial for battery longevity), lithium cell balancing, charge history, and Bluetooth/WiFi connectivity for remote monitoring (Victron VE.Direct, Renogy, Epever).

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