|
|
|
|
|
by lupusreal
283 days ago
|
|
As I understand it, you need to limit the current flow to ground to not create a fault that burns out the whole setup. The most practical way to do that is with a bank of resistors. At that point, the resistors are doing the work and you're just using the ground as a return path, which isn't necessary. |
|
Solar panels have no problem with being short circuited; the amount of heat they produce in that state is the same as any other black object in sunlight.
Windmills are like any other electromechanical generator in this sense. You have to stop them with a brake. But that is totally a thing you can do, and quickly, and every mainstream windmill does it regularly (if only to handle overspeed winds safely), although, when this system fails, you get spectacular viral video content.
In the usual case where it works, though, you don't need a load bank either.
Load banks come into play when conventional inflexible baseload generators can't ramp down fast enough or when perverse market incentives pay renewables operators to pump power into the grid when it's not being demanded.