wbwood
Oct 28, 2013Explorer
What you can do with solar
No sure how many other follow "Gone with the Wynns" but they did a nice little video on Solar Boondocking. They make it very enticing. Check the video out Here.
2oldman wrote:http://www.rapidtables.com/calc/electric/kwh-to-watt-calculator.htm
Takes me a bit of figuring each time to convert that KWH number to watts.
wbwood wrote:
I think he stated that you could not expect to run that many appliances every day and be able to keep your batteries charged. I agree with that. What I'm uncertain about is the ability to produce approximately 4.5 kWh in one solar period with 600 watts of solar with the conditions they allude to. They ran their batteries down to 50% that evening and turned off all electronics so they could start over again the next day and that it was the afternoon before they were charged back up. Still impressive IMHO.
If they had a couple more batteries and could harvest even more power there, then that would be even better. They certainly would benefit from more batteries with that much solar. However, batteries only store, not produce. Ultimately, all the power has to come from the panels. Solar will only produce to meet the demand up to its limit. A larger bank will let one average out the production fluctuations over a longer period of time.
12thgenusa wrote:
Jason, I see this is your first post on the forum so welcome.
I'm happy that you were able to do what you did. Many people spend a lot of time pointing out what you can't do with solar instead of exploring the possibilities.
I think I understand a little better what you did. You started the day with nearly full batteries, and charged them to full. You ended the day with 50% depleted batteries, taking about 1.9 kWh from the batteries. This left about 4.6 kwh to be produced by solar. This would require 8 to 9+ hours at full production of 34 amps to harvest. A very exceptional day indeed. Yet your video also shows a hazy day with a period of clouds and rain. The times you show the controller it is not showing max production. The batteries also showed 88% in the evening. So I'm a bit skeptical.
4.6 kWh proportional to my system of 370 watts would be 2.8 kWh. Running appliances all day in an attempt to keep production at maximum, the best I have seen is about 2.1 kWh.
On the other hand, 2kWh per day from a 600 watt system seems reasonable with generally good solar days.
The_Wynns wrote:
We do NOT use as many electronics on a regular day as we did in this video. This video is exclusively shot to see how far we can push our solar and batteries in one day's use, and trying not to deplete our batteries below 50%. This video was created as a continuation of the original 'solar intro' video we created a few months earlier: http://www.gonewiththewynns.com/extreme-rv-solar