That C2000 has always been a bad and buggy system. Anyone who then (and especially why) decided to build their own system should immediately be blacklisted and may never engage in such projects again (but that is of course mustard after dinner). Especially, because at the time all existing systems were not considered good enough and they thought/decided that things could easily be made better (and especially cheaper!).
Meanwhile, this system has cost claws full of money. What was previously thought to be possible to cut costs has since been spent in multiples on all kinds of changes in order to get and keep this system workable.
I would say, now is the time to replace C2000 asap, for another system. If this important national security system can be so easily disrupted, then it is past its prime.
In the meantime, perhaps publish a list of inverters that cause a lot of interference, so that the consumer can choose new solar panels, instead of a spontaneous ban on existing installations and/or the mandatory switching off afterwards.
As is often the case with the Dutch government, first release everything and above all do not think about the possible consequences and/or have it tested/investigated. As a result, it is only too late to notice that everything is not quite to your liking and only then pull the brake. As a result, that observation is much too late and the Dutch (Jan with the cap) have to sit on the blisters again.
If one had properly researched/tested everything in the beginning, then this problem would probably have been discovered earlier and/or one could have suspected these problems and then perhaps it could have been adjusted.
‘In the past’ TNO, among others, was asked to test/investigate/inspect everything, but that has of course been cut almost entirely. Because of course the manufacturers deliver their own (colored?) test results much cheaper and nobody looks further than that.
[Reactie gewijzigd door PsiTweaker op 16 juli 2021 17:21]
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