June 11Jun 11 Disclaimer: This post is purely for educational Informative purposes and represents an honest, transparent comparison between mainstream brands available in the South African market. It is not financial advice, and I am not affiliated with any brand or supplier. All facts are based on manufacturer data, real SA user feedback, and conservative estimates. No hidden facts everything is presented openly. There is also no intention to offend anyone personally or any brand name I am simply showing know facts. If I missed anything please add it in to the tread discussion. The aim is to have an open and honest discussion about the different products. The method I used was using an AI tool to emulate real world conditions to compare apples to apples without any sales and marketing talk involved looking at the real performance, good and bad aspects of each inverter. Reason for this exercise:To show what technically identical systems deliver in real-world performance, total cost, ROI, and long-term value in a hot Northern Cape environment (Pofadder). All systems use:34 × Longi BC 645W bifacial panels (BloombergNEF Tier 1 – chosen for excellent temperature coefficient and bifacial gain on silver roof).60 kWh Hubble AM16+ stack (well-known brand with solid reputation and full open compatibility).Same 50 kWh/day AI-optimised household load (aircons, 2 kW geyser, borehole pumps, appliances, etc.).Important note on pricing: All prices are very conservative market estimates based on current retail and typical installer quotes in South Africa. Installation costs reflect real-world complexity (earth-neutral bonding, labour, etc.). I have deliberately kept estimates on the higher side for honesty and transparency.Conversion Efficiency Discussion (Very Important in SA)With 2 strings of 6 panels (~267V nominal Vmp / 14.5 A), we have relatively high string voltage. This is more efficient on the same 6 mm² cable (lower current = lower I²R losses) than low-voltage strings.Most hybrids (Solis, GoodWe, Growatt, Luxpower, Deye/Sunsynk, Sigenergy): Can convert high-voltage PV DC directly to 230 V AC once the battery is full. This is the most efficient path (single conversion).Victron MultiPlus-II: PV always goes through external MPPTs → 48/51.2 V battery → then inverted to 230 V AC (double conversion). This adds ~3–7% extra losses, especially noticeable in high production.Higher string voltage helps all inverters at startup and low light, but Victron’s higher startup threshold (~120 V) means it starts producing later in the morning and stops earlier in the evening compared to Solis (90 V) or GoodWe (~58 V).Comparison Table (Full Technical Breakdown)RankInverter / SystemBNEF TierClaimed Max / Euro Eff.Emulated Real-World Eff. (Pofadder Heat)PV Startup VoltageMPPT Max CurrentAFCI (SA)Blending Power SourcesAC Coupling SupportGenerator Integration (Off-Grid Mode)Max Overload & DurationChangeover TimeGrid Forming (Real Grid Emulation)Remote User + Tech Support (Free)SA Warranty Terms (2026)Total System Cost10-Year Net Value10-Year ROI20-Year Net ValueKey Notes1Solis S6 8kW Pro/PlusTier 196.2% / 94.7%~93–94%90 V32 AYesExcellentFull (Backup + Aux/Gen)Excellent (Grid-side + dedicated Gen port)200% (16 kW) for 10s<4 msVery Good (emulates real grid jitter/impedance)Full via SolisCloudStandard 10 years (swap-out/replacement)R555k – R559kR1.180M – R1.274M211–228%R2.200M – R2.358MBuilt-in earth-neutral bond, advanced weekly profile app + hidden AI PV management.2GoodWe 8kW HybridTier 197.6% / 96.2%~92–93.5%58 V20–32 AYesVery GoodFullGood150–200% ~10s~10–20 msGoodFull via app5–10 years (often 10yr promo)R556.5k – R565kR1.048M – R1.152M185–204%R1.990M – R2.130MStrong low-light startup.3Growatt 8kW HybridTier 1/297.5% / ~96.5%~91.5–93%~60–80 V18–26 AYesGoodFullGood~150% ~10s~10–20 msGoodFull via ShinePhone5–10 years (varies)R551k – R564kR1.055M – R1.155M187–206%R1.980M – R2.120MMost common true budget brand in SA.4Luxpower 8kWTier 2~97.5% / ~96%~91–92.5%~80–100 V20–25 AYesGoodFullGood~150% ~10s~10–20 msGoodFull via app5–10 yearsR558k – R567kR1.023M – R1.127M180–199%R1.940M – R2.080MSolid mid-tier.5Deye / Sunsynk 8kWTier 297.6% / 97.0%~90–92%125–160 V22–26 ANoVery GoodFullExcellent150–200% ~10s~10–20 msGoodFull via app10 years but repair-only after 5yrs (customer pays labour/transport)R561k – R577kR990k – R1.098M172–191%R1.890M – R2.040MLong repair turnaround common.6Sigenergy SigenStor 8kWTier 2~98.2% / ~97%~93–94%100 V16 AYesExcellentFullGood150–200% ~10s<10 msVery GoodFull via mySigen app10 years (inverter + controller)R1.067M – R1.175MR780k – R880k67–82%R1.850M – R2.000MHeavy AI marketing, claims 0 ms transfer (technically impossible – real <10 ms). Installer Only support.7Victron MultiPlus-II 8kW (+MPPTs)Tier 2~95–96% / ~94%~88–91%120 VHigh (100 A+)Yes (add-on)Legendary (PowerAssist)ExcellentBest in class200%+ seconds<20 msVery clean / "perfect" grid (can reject sensitive grid-tied inverters)Best free remote via VRM5 years standard (extendable to 10 for extra cost)R595k – R631.5kR815k – R923k129–155%R1.620M – R1.770MPremium but highest cost + heat losses.Lower PV startup voltage = more daily energy harvested.Higher MPPT max current = less clipping risk in extreme high-irradiance/hot conditions.AFCI Protection significantly reduces DC arc-fault fire risk.External Energy Meter / CT Support (Zero-Export & Accurate Monitoring)All mainstream inverters in this comparison support external energy meters / CT clamps for accurate zero-export and whole-house monitoring:Solis S6 Pro/Plus: Excellent support + delayed grid connection function.GoodWe, Growatt, Luxpower, Deye/Sunsynk, Sigenergy: All have good external CT/meter support.Victron: Best-in-class (ET112 / ET340 integration via VRM, extremely flexible).Note: Nearly every modern hybrid supports this feature in SA. Solis and Victron are particularly strong in this area, but there is no major brand in this list that completely lacks external meter support.Conversion Paths & Efficiency RealityMost hybrids (Solis, GoodWe, etc.): High-voltage PV DC (~200–400 V) → directly to 230 V AC (single conversion) once battery is full. More efficient.Victron: PV always charges 48/51.2 V battery first, then inverts to 230 V AC (double conversion). Higher losses but better control and surge handling.Higher string voltage reduces cable losses on the same 6 mm² cable. Lower startup voltage inverters (Solis 90 V, GoodWe ~58 V) start producing earlier and longer than higher-threshold units (Victron ~120 V, Deye/Sunsynk ~125–160 V).Special Manufacturer Claims & Small Print RealityMost brands now have some form of AI energy management.Solis: Advanced weekly profile app + hidden AI PV management via API (not heavily advertised).Sigenergy: Heavily markets AI and claims 0 ms transfer (technically impossible real-world is sub-10 ms with detection + switching).Deye/Sunsynk: 10-year warranty often conditional on using their batteries. After 5 years: mostly repair only (customer pays labour/transport). Turnaround can be weeks to months. Replacements are rare.Sungrow Excluded because its a HV system. Firmware Update Reality:Deye, Sunsynk and Luxpower push firmware updates very frequently (sometimes monthly). Other brands (Solis, GoodWe, Growatt, Victron) release updates less often, mainly to add new features or improve compatibility rather than frequent bug fixes.After-Sales Support & Warranty Reality in South AfricaSolis: Operates its own dedicated support centre in South Africa. End-users can contact Solis support directly for technical help and warranty claims. However, they prefer that authorised resellers/installers handle client interactions while Solis assists the installers directly.Deye / Sunsynk / Luxpower: Support is primarily installer-driven. There are large private WhatsApp groups for installers (not open to the public). End-users are generally expected to go through their original installer.GoodWe: No known public or installer WhatsApp groups. Warranties and technical support are typically handled by the distributor or authorised reseller rather than direct end-user contact with GoodWe.Victron: Strong technical community via VRM portal, but official support and advanced troubleshooting are mainly handled through authorised installers. There are private installer groups not open to the public.Sigenergy: Almost exclusively installer-managed. The manufacturer does not engage directly with end-users all after-sales, technical support, and warranty claims must go through the original installer.Warranty Carry-In / Direct Replacement Reality in SAMost warranties in South Africa are carry-in (you or your installer must send the faulty unit back at your cost). However, some manufacturers occasionally send advance replacement units directly to the customer or installer to reduce downtime:Solis: Has done direct replacement (swap-out) to clients on several occasions to minimise downtime.Deye / Sunsynk: Mostly repair-only after 5 years. Direct replacements are rare and usually handled via the installer. Turnaround can be weeks to months.Victron: Typically repair-focused through authorised service centres. Advance replacements are possible but not common.GoodWe, Growatt, Luxpower, Sigenergy: Generally repair or replacement at the manufacturer’s discretion, usually routed through the installer/distributor. Direct-to-customer advance replacements are uncommon.This is a very important real-world factor in South Africa, especially in remote areas like the Northern Cape where installer responsiveness can vary significantly.This comparison uses conservative figures to maintain honesty and transparency. Real-world results will depend on installation quality, maintenance, and actual conditions.Would appreciate feedback from members running these inverters in the Northern Cape or similar hot areas, especially regarding warranty issues after-sales support installer support generator integration overheating derating and AC coupling of sensitive grid-tied inverters!
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