<input type="hidden" id="_wpnonce" name="_wpnonce" value="c34aa85f7e" /><input type="hidden" name="_wp_http_referer" value="/blog/wp-json/wp/v2/posts/40590" /><input type="hidden" id="_wpnonce" name="_wpnonce" value="c34aa85f7e" /><input type="hidden" name="_wp_http_referer" value="/blog/wp-json/wp/v2/posts/40590" />{"id":40590,"date":"2026-05-09T10:32:34","date_gmt":"2026-05-09T00:32:34","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.businesslegions.com\/blog\/?p=40590"},"modified":"2026-05-09T10:33:11","modified_gmt":"2026-05-09T00:33:11","slug":"quick-fix-to-change-the-max-sell-power-to-less-than-500w-on-the-deye-inverter","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.businesslegions.com\/blog\/2026\/05\/09\/quick-fix-to-change-the-max-sell-power-to-less-than-500w-on-the-deye-inverter\/","title":{"rendered":"QUICK FIX TO CHANGE THE MAX SELL POWER TO LESS THAN 500W ON THE DEYE INVERTER"},"content":{"rendered":"<!--CusAds0--><p>There are many reasons a home owner or installer might want to place a tight cap on how much solar power is exported to the public grid. Some households live under a strict export cap imposed by their local distribution network operator, others want to reduce export to focus on self consumption and battery charging, and a growing number simply prefer to avoid triggering smart meter alerts or to keep a very low and predictable export profile as a courtesy to neighbours. The Deye hybrid inverter range offers a straightforward way to manage export, but the default app interface enforces a minimum value of five hundred watts for the Max Sell Power parameter, which can be surprising when you want a gentler limit, perhaps one hundred watts or even effectively zero. Fortunately, there is a method inside the same app that allows you to set far lower values reliably, and it works in both the mobile app and the cloud portal once you know where to find it. In this guide we will walk through the logic behind export limits, explain what the Max Sell Power number actually does, show exactly where the in app minimum comes from and how to bypass it safely, and offer practical context so you can decide which value is sensible for your property and your local regulations.<\/p>\n<p><iframe loading=\"lazy\" title=\"YouTube video player\" src=\"https:\/\/www.youtube.com\/embed\/hxkfg2kRZUA\" width=\"560\" height=\"315\" frameborder=\"0\" allowfullscreen=\"allowfullscreen\"><\/iframe><\/p>\n<p>Before we get hands on, it helps to be clear about terminology. Deye uses the term Max Sell Power to describe the maximum amount of power that may be sold or exported to the grid at any moment in time. It is a cap on instantaneous power rather than a daily or monthly energy quota. If the inverter is capable of producing more power than the home loads and battery can absorb, and you have set a low Max Sell Power, the inverter will reduce its solar harvest or adjust battery behaviour to honour that ceiling. This is distinct from a simple export limit based on a current transformer or smart meter that measures grid flow and instructs the inverter to hold net export at or below zero. In many Deye setups both ideas coexist because the inverter is aware of grid flow via the meter, and Max Sell Power acts as an explicit ceiling in watts on top of that dynamic control. With those concepts in mind, we can explore the steps to configure a limit below five hundred watts.<\/p>\n<h3>WHY YOU MIGHT WANT A VERY LOW MAX SELL POWER<\/h3>\n<p>Across the United Kingdom and many other regions, grid connection agreements for domestic solar often specify an export cap. Historically that cap was generously sized relative to typical single phase inverters, but recent growth in rooftop capacity and increasing sensitivity to voltage rise on residential feeders has made operators more cautious. Some customers are granted an export limit of only a few hundred watts, and others must run zero export most of the time. Even if you have no formal limit, you may prefer to reserve energy for your battery during the day to avoid relying on the grid in the evening peak, which means keeping export low except during sustained surplus. A very low cap can also help avoid nuisance tripping of grid protection equipment in older neighbourhoods where voltage rises quickly when several homes export together on bright days. On a practical level a low Max Sell Power can act as a safety net when the household habits are unpredictable, ensuring the inverter never exports more than you intend even if, for example, a timer fails or a new appliance changes your load profile suddenly.<\/p>\n<p>Another important consideration is tariff structure. Some smart tariffs reward export only above a threshold or at specific times, while others pay very little for export during the middle of the day. In that context you may want to reduce export sharply outside the peak export windows, and then temporarily raise the cap when the tariff is favourable. The method we cover works just as well for raising as it does for lowering, so once you learn the single command approach you gain a flexible tool for adapting to changing conditions without climbing into a loft or opening a cabinet. This blend of regulatory compliance and economic optimisation is the backdrop for what follows, and it explains why Deye has both a user friendly interface that enforces a broad safe range and an advanced command pathway that gives experienced users more control.<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" style=\"display: block; margin: 1em auto; width: 80%; max-width: 600px; height: auto; border: 1px solid #ddd;\" src=\"https:\/\/cdn.businesslegions.com\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/ai_image_0e09bbf8_8.jpg?strip=all&w=960\" alt=\"A photorealistic image of a homeowner holding a modern smartphone indoors, with the Deye inverter mobile app open on a settings screen showing parameters like \u201cMax Sell Power\u201d, \u201cBattery Charge\u201d, and \u201cExport Limit\u201d. The phone is in focus with soft natural light, and a tidy living room is visible in the background.\" \/><\/p>\n<h3>WHERE THE SETTING LIVES IN THE DEYE APP AND WHAT THE RANGE MEANS<\/h3>\n<p>Open the Deye mobile app and connect to your inverter as usual. In the parameters area you will find a page where Max Sell Power is editable alongside other limit and control values. On this page the permitted range appears to be five hundred to twenty thousand watts, and the input box will refuse anything lower than the stated minimum. This is the intended experience for most users because the manufacturer wants to prevent inadvertent use of a very low number that could stop export entirely. It is also a reflection of how the app is designed to cater for a wide variety of inverter sizes, including larger commercial units where twenty kilowatts of export is plausible. At first glance this may give the impression that you cannot set a low cap for a small household installation, but the limit is only enforced in this particular screen, not in the device itself.<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" style=\"display: block; margin: 1em auto; width: 80%; max-width: 600px; height: auto; border: 1px solid #ddd;\" src=\"https:\/\/cdn.businesslegions.com\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/HOW_TO_CHANGE_THE_MAX_SELL_POWER_TO_LESS_THAN_500W_5.jpg?strip=all&w=960\" alt=\"HOW_TO_CHANGE_THE_MAX_SELL_POWER_TO_LESS_THAN_500W-0-00-10.png\" \/><\/p>\n<p>The same page repeats the permitted range below the entry field, again showing five hundred to twenty thousand as the acceptable window. It is helpful to remember that this is a user interface constraint rather than a hard coded device limit. The inverter firmware recognises and accepts commands with lower values, and the device will honour them if you send the correct instruction. This difference between the batch parameter edit page and the single command page is the key that unlocks the method described in the video and in this guide. The range on the batch page protects everyday users from accidental misconfiguration, while the single command page is a precise tool for qualified users and installers who know exactly what they need to achieve.<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" style=\"display: block; margin: 1em auto; width: 80%; max-width: 600px; height: auto; border: 1px solid #ddd;\" src=\"https:\/\/cdn.businesslegions.com\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/HOW_TO_CHANGE_THE_MAX_SELL_POWER_TO_LESS_THAN_500W_3.jpg?strip=all&w=960\" alt=\"HOW_TO_CHANGE_THE_MAX_SELL_POWER_TO_LESS_THAN_500W-0-00-19.png\" \/><\/p>\n<h3>WHY CHANGING THE VALUE HERE FAILS WHEN YOU ENTER LESS THAN FIVE HUNDRED<\/h3>\n<p>If you try to type a smaller number in the batch edit field, for example one hundred watts, the app will reject the input immediately or refuse to save the change. This behaviour can be frustrating until you realise it is by design, and that the app offers a second pathway for sending the same command without the batch page constraints. Think of the batch page as a convenience for applying several changes together within a safe envelope, while the single command area is a more direct interface to the inverter that passes exactly what you type. It is common to see limits like these in industrial control software and even in consumer device apps, as it reduces support tickets for accidental misconfigurations while leaving power users a way to do what is necessary through a different menu.<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" style=\"display: block; margin: 1em auto; width: 80%; max-width: 600px; height: auto; border: 1px solid #ddd;\" src=\"https:\/\/cdn.businesslegions.com\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/HOW_TO_CHANGE_THE_MAX_SELL_POWER_TO_LESS_THAN_500W_4.jpg?strip=all&w=960\" alt=\"HOW_TO_CHANGE_THE_MAX_SELL_POWER_TO_LESS_THAN_500W-0-00-40.png\" \/><\/p>\n<p>There is also a subtle but important behavioural difference between the two paths. The batch edit function often checks your values against a profile tied to the inverter capacity and region, and then applies a set of changes together after validation. The single command function sends an individual parameter change immediately to the inverter, and the inverter firmware itself validates whether the requested value is sensible for the hardware. That is why the single command allows a zero minimum in this case, because the device is capable of zero export operation. With the context in place we can move to the actual steps.<\/p>\n<h3>USING THE SINGLE COMMAND METHOD TO SET A LOWER MAX SELL POWER<\/h3>\n<p>From the top of the parameter page, there is a tab or button labelled Single Command. Tap this to switch to a list of individual commands that can be sent directly to the inverter. Scroll through the list until you find Set Max Sell Power and select it. You will see a different interface compared to the batch page, with a field for the value and a send button below. On this page the minimum allowed value is displayed as zero, confirming that the inverter will accept a cap as low as zero watts, which effectively disables export. Enter the value you intend to use, such as one hundred watts for a very gentle trickle export, or fifty watts if you want to be as close to zero as possible without fully disabling the capability. If your grid company has given you a formal cap, use the number they provided, and if you are experimenting start conservatively so you can observe how the system behaves in daylight conditions.<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" style=\"display: block; margin: 1em auto; width: 80%; max-width: 600px; height: auto; border: 1px solid #ddd;\" src=\"https:\/\/cdn.businesslegions.com\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/HOW_TO_CHANGE_THE_MAX_SELL_POWER_TO_LESS_THAN_500W_2.jpg?strip=all&w=960\" alt=\"HOW_TO_CHANGE_THE_MAX_SELL_POWER_TO_LESS_THAN_500W-0-00-58.png\" \/><\/p>\n<p>When you are happy with the value, press Send Command. The app will transmit the instruction immediately to the inverter. Look at the bottom of the screen for a status line or a panel titled Last Command Record. If the communication succeeded and the device accepted the value, you should see the word Succeeded along with a timestamp and perhaps the command name. This is your confirmation that the inverter has registered the new limit and will enforce it the next time there is power available for export. If the last command status shows a failure or stays pending, wait a few seconds and try again, and ensure your phone has a reliable connection to the inverter either locally via the data logger or through the internet.<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" style=\"display: block; margin: 1em auto; width: 80%; max-width: 600px; height: auto; border: 1px solid #ddd;\" src=\"https:\/\/cdn.businesslegions.com\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/HOW_TO_CHANGE_THE_MAX_SELL_POWER_TO_LESS_THAN_500W_1.jpg?strip=all&w=960\" alt=\"HOW_TO_CHANGE_THE_MAX_SELL_POWER_TO_LESS_THAN_500W-0-01-32.png\" \/><\/p>\n<p>Once the status confirms success, switch back to the batch command page and you should see that the Max Sell Power field now shows your low value, even though the batch page would not allow you to type it directly. This mirrors the experience in the video and demonstrates that the app is not refusing low values at the device level, only during input on that one screen. At this point the inverter is obeying your new cap. On the next bright period, open the live data page and watch the grid power value. You should see that export stabilises right around your set value when the house loads and battery charging have been satisfied, and that excess solar production is curtailed or diverted to battery depending on your working mode.<\/p>\n<h3>VERIFICATION TIPS AND HOW TO OBSERVE THE EFFECT IN PRACTICE<\/h3>\n<p>There are a few practical ways to confirm that the new cap is effective beyond the app status line. If you have a smart meter with near real time feedback, watch the export indicator or the app from your utility provider during a sunny hour when the battery is full and house loads are light. You should observe that export does not exceed your cap. Within the Deye app, look for the grid power line on the home screen or the detailed graph view and note how the curve flattens at your set point. If your system includes a dedicated energy meter with a data feed, its export channel will show the same ceiling behaviour. A good test is to start with a modest cap like two hundred watts and then raise it temporarily to three hundred while watching the live curves, which will confirm that the inverter responds to your inputs promptly and in the expected manner.<\/p><!--CusAds0-->\n<p>Keep an eye on battery state of charge as well. With a low export cap, the inverter will try to push surplus into the battery whenever the battery can accept charge and your charge limits allow it. This can be beneficial if your goal is to store energy for later use, but it also means the battery may reach full earlier in the day. Once the battery is full, the inverter will begin to limit solar harvest more aggressively to honour the export cap, so panel output on a clear day may flatten even at modest power if your house loads are small. This is normal and is the core behaviour that protects the grid from excessive injection. If you are on an export tariff that rewards high export later in the day, you may want to adjust the cap dynamically or use schedules so that the battery has room to absorb energy until the tariff window opens.<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" style=\"display: block; margin: 1em auto; width: 80%; max-width: 600px; height: auto; border: 1px solid #ddd;\" src=\"https:\/\/cdn.businesslegions.com\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/ai_image_6e0cb30b_7.jpg?strip=all&w=960\" alt=\"A photorealistic image of a Deye hybrid inverter mounted in a tidy utility room with visible CT clamps on the incoming grid cables near the consumer unit, an energy meter on the wall, and neatly routed solar PV cables. Natural light enters through a small window, and safety labels are legible.\" \/><\/p>\n<h3>IMPORTANT CONSIDERATIONS BEFORE YOU GO LOWER THAN FIVE HUNDRED<\/h3>\n<p>Although the single command path allows you to set Max Sell Power as low as zero, it is important to think through the implications and stay within any conditions of your grid connection. If your agreement specifies a minimum export capability or requires that the inverter can cease export on command, work with your installer to ensure your chosen value respects the document. In practical terms very low caps can change how voltage behaves on your local feeder if many neighbours do the same, sometimes for the better. However, your own experience with appliance behaviour can shift as well because the inverter may ride the boundary of export control more often, particularly when clouds pass and solar production changes rapidly. The Deye control loop is fast, but any inverter will show brief adjustments when clouds and loads swing quickly, so allow for a few seconds of overshoot in live graphs and do not chase perfection minute by minute.<\/p>\n<p>Make sure the grid sensing hardware is installed and calibrated correctly, because export control depends on accurate measurement of power flow at the point of common coupling. If the current transformer orientation is reversed or the energy meter wiring is incorrect, the inverter may misinterpret import as export and vice versa, leading to poor control of grid flow regardless of the Max Sell Power setting. If you observe odd behaviour such as export rising above your cap for extended periods, or import when there should be slight export, verify meter wiring, CT direction, and phase mapping in the app. For three phase installations, confirm that the measurement device is configured for three phase and that each phase is aligned correctly in the software. Max Sell Power is usually a total power cap across all phases, but if your local rules require per phase limits you will need to consult the manual or your installer for the correct configuration.<\/p>\n<p>Battery settings matter as well. If you intend to rely on the battery to absorb surplus instead of exporting it, ensure that battery charge power limits are high enough to take the excess when the sun is strong, and that the schedule or working mode allows charging during the hours you expect generation. If you clamp export to a very low number while the battery charge rate is also restricted or the battery is full, the inverter will have no place to put the extra energy and will curtail the solar harvest aggressively. This is not harmful, but it may not be what you expect if you are used to seeing higher solar power figures in the app. Consider raising battery charge limits within safe battery specifications if you frequently hit export caps while the battery remains undercharged.<\/p>\n<h3>DOING THE SAME THING IN THE CLOUD PORTAL<\/h3>\n<p>Everything described above can be done from the cloud portal if you prefer a larger screen or if you manage several sites. After logging in to the portal and selecting your plant, navigate to the device page and find the parameter settings area. You will see a similar batch style parameter list with range limits applied, and a single command section where you can choose Set Max Sell Power and enter a value as low as zero. The user interface may look slightly different from the mobile app, but the underlying options are the same, and the device responds in the same way. The portal can be particularly useful if you are adjusting a fleet of inverters to a new export policy, as you can move between devices quickly and observe status without walking to each unit.<\/p>\n<p>Be mindful of connectivity. The success of a single command depends on the data logger being online and communicating with the server. If you are on site and have access to the local wireless network of the data logger, the mobile app may deliver commands directly with lower latency. If you are remote and the internet link is intermittent, you may see occasional timeouts that resolve themselves when the device reconnects. The Last Command Record status is your friend here, as it confirms that the instruction reached the inverter and took effect. If the portal shows failure frequently, consider scheduling the change at a time when the device is online or contact the site owner to check the data connection.<\/p>\n<h3>TROUBLESHOOTING AND COMMON QUESTIONS<\/h3>\n<p>What if the single command is missing or greyed out. In many systems the availability of certain commands depends on your user role or permissions. If the account is set up as a viewer or basic owner, the Set Max Sell Power option may be hidden to prevent accidental changes. Request the appropriate role from your installer or site administrator. In some cases a password or code is required to access installer level parameters. If you change the value and nothing happens, double check that you pressed Send Command and that the Last Command Record shows Succeeded. If it does and the behaviour does not change, verify that you are looking at the right metric in the app and that the system has had an opportunity to export. On a cloudy day when house loads are high, there may be no export to limit, in which case you will not see any effect until the next sunny period.<\/p>\n<p>Is Max Sell Power the same as zero export. Not exactly. Zero export is a dynamic control mode that uses live measurements to hold net power at the point of connection around zero. Max Sell Power is a ceiling that says even when conditions would allow export, do not export more than the set value. If you set the value to zero, you effectively achieve the same outcome as a pure zero export mode, but the internal logic may differ between models and firmware versions. If you have a dedicated zero export mode, you can use that for general control and the Max Sell Power as a hard stop, but many users simply set Max Sell Power to a low number and rely on it as the primary limiter. Can you schedule different limits during the day. While the single command itself is a one time setting, some control platforms allow scheduled parameter changes or scenes that can send commands at specific times. Check your portal for a rule engine or ask your installer whether time based profiles are available for your model and firmware.<\/p>\n<p>What happens if you set a very low value like fifty watts. In most homes the inverter will run just below that figure when the battery is full and loads are met, gently exporting a trickle of power. If clouds pass or a kettle switches on, you will see export drop to zero or become import temporarily as the system balances. This behaviour is normal and shows that the control loop is fast but not telepathic, and that household loads will always introduce small swings around the set point. If you want a cleaner line close to zero, raise the cap slightly to allow the control loop to breathe, for example one hundred watts instead of fifty, and avoid chasing the exact number minute by minute. Remember that the grid operator is more concerned with sustained export beyond your allowed cap than with transient wiggles in the tens of watts.<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" style=\"display: block; margin: 1em auto; width: 80%; max-width: 600px; height: auto; border: 1px solid #ddd;\" src=\"https:\/\/cdn.businesslegions.com\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/ai_image_7820a320_6.jpg?strip=all&w=960\" alt=\"A photorealistic image of a semi detached UK home with rooftop solar panels under mild sunshine, a smart meter In Home Display on a kitchen counter showing near zero export, and a homeowner glancing at it with a cup of tea. The scene is bright and natural with authentic textures.\" \/><\/p>\n<h3>PRACTICAL WORKFLOWS AND SMALL REFINEMENTS FOR EVERYDAY USE<\/h3>\n<p>After you have set a low Max Sell Power and confirmed that the inverter honours it, consider a few refinements that can make day to day operation smoother. Many users find it helpful to keep a small note of the values they have tried and the observed outcomes in different seasons. In early spring and late autumn, when solar harvest is modest and house loads are varied, you might choose a somewhat higher cap to avoid unnecessary curtailment while the battery is charging. In midsummer, reduce the cap to your contractual limit or to a level that keeps export minimal without reducing comfort. Revisit battery charge and discharge limits to ensure that you are making the most of your storage during peak price periods or when your feed in tariff encourages export at specific hours. Over time you will find a pattern that suits your household, your tariff, and your grid agreement, and the single command method gives you the flexibility to adjust without friction.<\/p>\n<p>Another refinement is to combine a low Max Sell Power with intelligent load shifting. If you keep export very low, consider scheduling dishwashers, washing machines, and immersion heaters to run during the middle of the day, so the solar energy is consumed on site instead of being clipped by the limit. Smart plugs or built in appliance timers can help here. For heat pumps and electric vehicles, be mindful of ramp rates and demand spikes. If you plan to charge an electric vehicle during the day with solar, a very low export cap will not hinder anything directly, but the system will have little spare capacity to absorb sudden increases in production, so plan for a stable charging session and watch grid import for a minute or two when you start a large load. The idea is not to chase perfection in every moment, but to set sensible boundaries that support a calm and compliant operation.<\/p>\n<p>Finally, know how to revert. If you need to return to a higher cap because a technician is testing the system or because your agreement changes, use the same single command path and enter a value that suits the new situation. The batch page will immediately reflect your change, and you can treat it as the truth source for what is currently enforced. If you prefer to document the change in a more formal way, take a screenshot of the Last Command Record with the Succeeded status and the value, and save it in your system records. This can be useful if you must demonstrate compliance to a network operator or if you are coordinating with an installer who manages several properties.<\/p>\n<h3>WHAT THIS CHANGE MEANS DAY TO DAY<\/h3>\n<p>Learning to set Max Sell Power below five hundred watts in the Deye app is more than a hidden trick, it is a small but meaningful step toward a more thoughtful approach to distributed generation. It puts you in control of your interface with the grid and allows your household to be a polite participant in a shared electrical neighbourhood, rather than a noisy one. Through the single command screen you gain precision that the batch page hides, which lets you align the inverter exactly with your obligations and your preferences. The screenshots in the video and in this guide show that the enforcement of the five hundred minimum lives only in the batch input box, not in the device itself, and that the Last Command Record is your reliable source of truth for whether the device accepted your instruction. Once the cap is set and you have observed it in action, you can relax into a routine where export is predictable, battery behaviour is intentional, and tariff strategies are easier to implement.<\/p>\n<p>In practice households that adopt a gentle export cap see a cleaner profile in their monitoring apps and fewer surprises. The inverter does the quiet work of trimming solar harvest when the house and battery are satisfied, and of allowing a controlled trickle to the grid when appropriate. Your smart meter or utility app will show a steadier line, your neighbours will be less aware of voltage swings on sunny days, and you will be closer to the spirit of modern grid participation, which prizes flexibility and courtesy. Should your circumstances change, whether because of a new tariff, a grid upgrade, or a battery expansion, the same method adapts smoothly. You can lift the cap when export is valuable, or drop it again when self consumption takes priority. Through careful observation and a few well placed parameter changes, you will have turned a simple inverter setting into a practical tool for a stable and efficient home energy system.<\/p>\n<div class=\"lt-box\" style=\"border:1px solid #1d6a9e\"><div class=\"lt-box-title\" style=\"background-color:#2485C6;border-top:1px solid #a7cee8;text-shadow:1px 1px 0 #0b283b\">DO YOU LIKE WHAT YOU'VE READ?<\/div><div class=\"lt-box-content\">Join our subscription list and receive our content right in your mailbox. If you like to receive some Great deals our Freebies then subscribe now!\r\n\r\n<p><div class=\"tnp tnp-subscription \">\n<form method=\"post\" action=\"https:\/\/www.businesslegions.com\/blog\/wp-admin\/admin-ajax.php?action=tnp&amp;na=s\">\n<input type=\"hidden\" name=\"nlang\" value=\"\">\n<div class=\"tnp-field tnp-field-firstname\"><label for=\"tnp-1\">Name<\/label>\n<input class=\"tnp-name\" type=\"text\" name=\"nn\" id=\"tnp-1\" value=\"\" placeholder=\"\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"tnp-field tnp-field-email\"><label for=\"tnp-2\">Email<\/label>\n<input class=\"tnp-email\" type=\"email\" name=\"ne\" id=\"tnp-2\" value=\"\" placeholder=\"\" required><\/div>\n<div class=\"tnp-field tnp-field-button\" style=\"text-align: left\"><input class=\"tnp-submit\" type=\"submit\" value=\"Subscribe\" style=\"\">\n<\/div>\n<\/form>\n<\/div>\n<\/p>\r\n\r\n<\/div><\/div><!--CusAds0-->\n<div style=\"font-size: 0px; height: 0px; line-height: 0px; margin: 0; padding: 0; clear: both;\"><\/div>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>There are many reasons a home owner or installer might want to place a tight cap on how much solar power is exported to the public grid. Some households live under a strict export cap imposed by their local distribution network operator, others want to reduce export to focus on self consumption and battery charging, [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":40589,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[2835,9457,9459,9460,3322,2760,2759,9458,2823],"class_list":["post-40590","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-business","tag-battery","tag-deye","tag-deye-app","tag-deye-cloud","tag-hybrid","tag-inverter","tag-power","tag-sell","tag-solar"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.businesslegions.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/40590","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.businesslegions.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.businesslegions.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.businesslegions.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.businesslegions.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=40590"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/www.businesslegions.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/40590\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":40591,"href":"https:\/\/www.businesslegions.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/40590\/revisions\/40591"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.businesslegions.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/40589"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.businesslegions.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=40590"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.businesslegions.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=40590"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.businesslegions.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=40590"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}