I realize as a moderator you make the rules, but I live in a world where facts and the laws of physics are important and would like to hear the facts that support your opinion. Please explain the physics of the shock to the system if I were to turn off my breaker when I was generating 6kW of back feed or running my dryer and oven when I shut off the power? Solar eclipse? Even that concern was debunked years ago. Turning off my oven or electric dryer is more of a shock to my system than my solar system will ever produce. What solar systems have you seen that "suddenly" stop sending power? My systems gradually taper off on cloudy days. What specifically can get damaged from an infrastructure standpoint from power flowing in two directions? Please consider how the power flows to the closest other loads on the same transformer first then onto the distribution network where it most likely serves the loads down stream of a substation which actually reduces the load at a substation. A solar home is not always continuous and the sudden on / off of sending power can cause the POCO to have issues.Īll those people that really think they are helping the POCO with a solar installation are incorrect in their thinking.Physics tells us that transformers are bidirectional. the grid was designed for sending power one way not 2 ways and the infrastructure may suffer from that type of distribution. A solar home is not always continuous and the sudden on / off of sending power can cause the POCO to have issues.Īll those people that really think they are helping the POCO with a solar installation are incorrect in their thinking. Also the grid was designed for sending power one way not 2 ways and the infrastructure may suffer from that type of distribution. That may be true for as much as 40% of the day but not for 100%. So it’s explained as a solar generation problem not a draw loading problem as I understand it.Again most people are uninformed that solar will reduce the load on the grid. The are asking for information about how many ev are present on the circle as an excuse to upgrade the transformer to get around the expense. They have a problem issuing a permit for solar which takes the load off the transformer. They don’t have a problem building the house with the additional load they have a permit for that already. To learn more about relationship-based ads, online behavioral advertising and our privacy practices, please review the Bank of America Online Privacy Notice and our Online Privacy FAQs.If that were true then they wouldn’t have a problem issuing a solar installation permit. You may also visit the individual sites for additional information on their data and privacy practices and opt-out options. To learn more about ad choices, or to opt out of interest-based advertising with non-affiliated third-party sites, visit YourAdChoices layer powered by the DAA or through the Network Advertising Initiative's Opt-Out Tool layer. Ads served on our behalf by these companies do not contain unencrypted personal information and we limit the use of personal information by companies that serve our ads. Relationship-based ads and online behavioral advertising help us do that.īank of America participates in the Digital Advertising Alliance ("DAA") self-regulatory Principles for Online Behavioral Advertising and uses the Advertising Options Icon on our behavioral ads on non-affiliated third-party sites (excluding ads appearing on platforms that do not accept the icon). We strive to provide you with information about products and services you might find interesting and useful. Member FDIC ©2023 Bank of America Corporation. Bank of America and the Bank of America logo are registered trademarks of Bank of America Corporation. Mobile Banking requires that you download the Mobile Banking app and is only available for select mobile devices. The Zelle ® related marks are used under license from Early Warning Services, LLC. That's it! The bill pay option in the Bank of America ® Mobile App helps make things easy. You can also view scheduled payment and payment history in the activity tab. You can save a copy of your payment or print or email your payment information before you click “Done.” Don't worry, you haven't paid anything yet! Make sure that you check all of the information prior to selecting “Pay”. Select your payee and click on “Pay”.Įnter the amount and Deliver By date. and “Pay bills”.Īll payees you have previously set up will show here. Our Bank of America® Mobile app allows you to securely manage and pay all of your bills in a single place.
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