Reading The Results Overview
The results page is where a saved version becomes a result you can review properly. Before you focus on battery count, inverter size, or panel count, it helps to understand how the page is laid out and what each part is trying to tell you.
Start with the version selector
At the top of the page, the version selector tells GridGap which saved version you are looking at. The summary cards around it give quick context, including the version name, version number, created date, last modified date, and warning count.
This is the first place to slow down. If you are comparing results, make sure you are looking at the right version before you read anything else. GridGap preserves results by version, so reading the wrong version can make the whole comparison misleading.
Read the scenario summary next
Under the version selector you will see Scenario Results. In the current app flow, a version carries one scenario, so this section works as the summary card for the scenario saved in that version.
That card gives you a quick read of the result before you move into the detailed tabs. Depending on the scenario type, it can show items such as battery count, battery configuration, battery depletion, recommended inverter size, recommended charger size, and warnings stored.
Use this as the short summary, not the final answer. It tells you where the scenario is headed and whether anything already looks obviously large, tight, or warning-heavy.
Use the detail tabs for the full picture
The lower part of the page is the detailed result area. This is where GridGap breaks the saved result into tabs such as Overview, Battery, Inverter, Charging, Solar, Solar Controller, Equipment Check, Installation Guidance, and Warnings.
Not every version shows every tab. A battery-focused result will not have solar tabs. Installation guidance appears only when installation data is available. Equipment Check is separate from the core calculator and is there as an optional comparison tool.
How to read the Overview tab
The Overview tab is the best starting point once you have confirmed the version. It pulls the most important stored outputs into one place so you can judge the scenario before diving into deeper tabs.
The exact card set depends on the scenario, but common headline cards include Night load Wh or Total off-grid Wh, Battery depletion, Energy to replace, Battery count, Battery configuration, Recommended inverter size, Recommended charger size, Panels required, Autonomy hours, Recharge time, Battery reserve margin, Inverter load, and Solar surplus / shortfall.
Read this tab as a guide to where the system pressure is. If battery depletion is high, move into the Battery tab. If the charger requirement or recharge time stands out, move into Charging. If solar requirement or surplus looks uncomfortable, move into Solar and Solar Controller. If the overview seems fine but the warnings count is high, do not stop here.
A good reading order
A sensible way to read the page is this. First confirm the version. Then read the scenario summary card. After that, review the Overview tab. Only then move into the detailed tabs that matter most for the result you are looking at.
This approach keeps you from getting lost in individual numbers too early. It also makes it easier to compare versions later, because you are using the same reading pattern each time.