You have solar power charging a minimal battery with all micro inverters feeding from the batt. Power goes off and the grid tie at the mains drops out automatically [so the inverters dont have to turn off and are refined so that they dont], but leaves your house connected.
You just described EXACTLY what a hybrid inverter system does.
However, microinverters don't work that way. They change low voltage DC into 240AC right at the panel....one per panel. The advantage of that is cost ( $150 each versus $1500+ for a central inverter ), low power loss from the panel to the grid connection, since it is 240AC versus low voltage DC, and simplification.....you literally plug and play.
Also, they are easy to expand. Say I want to add one panel to an existing system. I buy one panel, and one micro inverter, mount, plug in and produce.
With a hybrid central inverter, there are many other factors to consider.....will the charge controller handle my expansion ? If not, add another 600 buck charge controller. Are the inverters at max now ? If so, add more central inverters. ( 1500-3000 bucks ). Are my disconnects and fuses rated to handle more panels ?. And so on and so on....
Expansion isn't NEAR as easy with a central inverter setup. Done both, micro inverters win that prize.
You are immediately alerted if you are there. If solar is critical you can take action by shedding load and/or adding adaptive charge to the batts using an inverter gen and DC power suppy.
larry
You can be producing 10,000watts of solar, and a cloud pass over, and the production go to 1,000....immediately. Unless you were planning to sit there with your finger on a breaker to kill the circuit to your freezer at the exact right moment, it would brown out.....attempting to draw more amperage as the voltage decreased and burn out the motor.
GO to my Enphase page:
https://enlighten.enphaseenergy.com/public/systems/4Y8U142036
Look at the graphs at the bottom of the page. Pick a day with a lot of spikes in it.....that's a day with sun and clouds....like Wed, Aug 14th for example. Mouse over the 2nd high spike in the morning...it will give you the time and production. 3315 watts at 9:50. Then mouse over the dip next to it. It falls to 909 watts at 10:10. There is a twenty minute window with over a 2,000 watt variance in production. Does the same thing the rest of the day...peaking at 4354w around solar noon ( 1pm daylight ) up 1500w from 15 minutes previously.
The battery bank in the system buffers that load. The hybrid inverters feeding off the batteries will also shut down if the bank voltage drops enough, but that is like you sitting there having to regulate it