I believe we have incomplete information. There is already a controlled residential ventilation system with active cooling, a heated pool, and the pool pump. Maybe also an irrigation system?
With some providers offering so-called "Stromcloud" solutions, the "Cloudstrom" is mistakenly presented as self-consumption. This could also be the case in this screenshot.
I think we have incomplete information. There is already a controlled residential ventilation system with active cooling, a heated pool, and the pool pump. Maybe also an irrigation system?
The heated pool is a round one, as you typically know it, not a large, built-in basin. And the heat pump for the pool requires ~3kwh/day, the values are what a friend reported to me from his comparable system. But yes, I will also deactivate the pool heating and observe the power consumption.
With some providers offering so-called "Stromcloud" solutions, the "cloud electricity" is mistakenly presented as self-consumption. This could also be the case in this screenshot.
I read the diagram a bit differently. But maybe I’m missing something. You don’t have a continuous consumption of 5 kWh between 8:00 and 21:00. During this time you are almost 100% self-sufficient (green reference line). Around 14:00 you have a power peak of about 4.5 kW (orange reference line). But basically, I find the consumption really sporty.
You are completely right, the "dark" orange line shows the consumption. In total, the consumption does not fall below 2.6 kW from 8 am to 5 pm. The yield is sometimes slightly above the consumption, so the battery (blue bar) is charged a bit before it then empties again relatively quickly. If we now assume that the cooling runs constantly at 1.5 kW, the rest of the household at 1 kW would still be considered relatively high. The question I ask myself is whether the cooling should not switch off again at some point, or could it be that it always runs "full blast"? I can either set my air conditioner to a target temperature (then it also switches off), or to Alaska and it hums along all day at full load.