The panels feed the grid-tie inverter (Fronius). It would have been better in terms of efficiency to charge them directly but this way you benefit from the generation tariff. The panels peak at about 450V, the inverter is running at 110% (max rated oddly enough) in full sun.
The bank is 3 x 270Ah which are just connected in parallel. They then feed (directly connected) a 2KW and a 500W pure sine wave inverters (single phase) for the lights and plugs. They are not synced to the grid at all. I split the circuits in the house to manageable sizes in terms of lights and plugs by making smaller rings. There is then a couple of change over contactors which switch the circuit’s (L/N) feed between grid and inverter. Earth obviously stays common across it all. So, when the inverters are running, it’s essentially just a different phase on the circuit. If you ever connect them together there will be a nice flash

RCDs also at each source so the protection remains. If a blind electrician came along and ignored all the stickers, warning labels and instruction labels, he would kill himself. There is a secondary relay stays energised while there is grid power. The contactor’s coil goes through the relay’s NO contacts so, should you pull the main supply fuse for the house, everything will shut down and the whole house would be safe. A home-brew failsafe of sorts. This is overrideable for when there is a general power failure. I can still use a lot of my house.
I have a split DB board which has the heavy load stuff (kitchen, TV room and bedrooms) untouched and the other side is then managed by the contactor. There is a third mini DB board which manages the study (the only room to feed from the batteries at night) Same principal as above though.
If the inverter is overloaded (It’s 2KW but can handle 3KW IIRC surge) then it drops out using its own protection. Once it drops out, the contactor falls back and everything is back to normal. I’ve had it running at 2KW for a while to see and it works just fine. The batteries don’t like you much though as they’re dishing out 190A between them continuously. They fade surprisingly quickly. The inverter handles the hoover which is rated at 2KW but the start-up surge would be higher. My tong tester is not quick enough to measure it though.
The biggest fright I got with it all was the rate of decay a Pb battery has. Have a look at
http://batteryuniversity.com/ if you’re unsure. There are some discharge calculators there. I could do with 2 more batteries to ease the load on them but a) don’t have space ATM and b) the 3 are now a year old so adding more new ones would be silly.
The biggest issue you will have if you want to run power tools is the poor power factor. It’s a killer for me at the moment. I would get more out of the batteries if I could get the Pf better/corrected. It’s on the (rather long) project list…
If you don’t have the feed-in tarrif, you could simplify it a lot with a “normal” setup.
3 Phase is where it gets expensive. I remember seeing a 3 phase inverter for sale and the price was shocking.