Sunsynk power flow card for LuxpowerTek Inverter (Update 2)

Sunsynk full power flow card

Following on from my previous article about the Sunsynk power flow card for Luxpower Tek Inverter. The developer has just kept on making it better and better. It now has a LuxpowerTek image. The solar will be greyed out once it gets below 10 watts. The nicest update is the house. It is coloured as a percentage of where the power is coming from, nice touch.

The code below has been updated to reflect our extra battery. We now have 9.6 kWh of battery available.

type: custom:sunsynk-power-flow-card
cardstyle: full
show_solar: true
inverter:
  model: lux
  modern: false
  auto_scale: true
battery:
  energy: 9600
  shutdown_soc: 10
  show_daily: true
  invert_power: true
  colour: green
  auto_scale: true
solar:
  show_daily: true
  mppts: 2
  pv1_name: Back
  pv2_name: Front
  auto_scale: true
  dynamic_colour: true
load:
  show_daily: true
grid:
  show_daily_buy: true
  show_daily_sell: true
  show_nonessential: false
  invert_grid: true
  no_grid_colour: green
  auto_scale: true
  export_colour: green
entities:
  day_pv_energy_108: sensor.lux_solar_output_daily
  inverter_voltage_154: sensor.lux_grid_voltage_live
  load_frequency_192: sensor.lux_grid_frequency_live
  inverter_current_164: none
  inverter_power_175: sensor.lux_battery_flow_live
  grid_connected_status_194: binary_sensor.binary_on_grid
  inverter_status_59: sensor.lux_status
  day_battery_charge_70: sensor.lux_battery_charge_daily
  day_battery_discharge_71: sensor.lux_battery_discharge_daily
  battery_voltage_183: sensor.lux_battery_voltage_live
  battery_soc_184: sensor.lux_battery
  battery_power_190: sensor.lux_battery_flow_live
  battery_current_191: none
  grid_power_169: sensor.grid_power
  day_grid_import_76: sensor.lux_power_from_grid_daily
  day_grid_export_77: sensor.lux_power_to_grid_daily
  grid_ct_power_172: sensor.lux_grid_flow_live
  day_load_energy_84: sensor.lux_home_consumption_daily
  essential_power: sensor.lux_home_consumption_live
  nonessential_power: none
  aux_power_166: none
  pv_total: sensor.lux_solar_output_live
  pv1_power_186: sensor.lux_solar_output_array_1_live
  pv2_power_187: sensor.lux_solar_output_array_2_live
  pv1_voltage_109: none
  pv1_current_110: none
  pv2_voltage_111: none
  pv2_current_112: none
  inverter_ac_temp: sensor.lux_radiator_1_temperature_live
  inverter_dc_temp: sensor.lux_radiator_2_temperature_live
  remaining_solar: sensor.solcast_forecast_remaining_today
  energy_cost_sell: sensor.agile_current_export_rate
  energy_cost_buy: sensor.agile_current_import_rate
  environment_temp: sensor.met_office_town_temperature_3_hourly
view_layout:
  grid-area: m1
 
Michael Curtis

My introduction to computers started at my middle school in 1981 when our maths teacher brought in a ZX80. That led the computer club being founded and using a Research Machine 380Z

My first computer was a 48K ZX Spectrum which I loved to programme. Once I left school I worked as a photocopier engineer, then a fax engineer and finally moving on the Apple computers.

For the next 30 years I worked as a system administrator. I now work in the cyber security industry as a Sophos Professional Services consultant

https://www.bazmac.me
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Replacing LuxpowerTek charge and discharge GUI with Home Assistant