Feb-11-2020 09:06 AM
Feb-21-2020 01:14 PM
jdc1 wrote:allen8106 wrote:
I'm curious about how you added solar to the rig in 1 1/2 hours. Mine took days. You don't mention the battery monitor, inverter, shunt or any fusing.
I already knew where I was mounting everything. Climbed up. Bolted down the panel. Ran the wire through the hole in the roof (into a box made for rv rooftops)to a fused 20A controller. Ran the wire to battery along the water line to an jacknife shutoff in the battery storage are. Then put the last fuse (30A) in place just before the battery bank. I did it all before noon, so there were no beer breaks.....and the wife was at a quilt retreat, so she couldn't bother me.
It seems to be working great. With no obstructions, it should be able keep my batteries (3-80 amp/hr) charged fairly well when boon docking.
Feb-12-2020 06:47 PM
2oldman wrote:jdc1 wrote:That will be totally dependent on your power usage. As mentioned above, 30ah would be less than 3 hours of TV at my house.
With no obstructions, it should be able keep my batteries (3-80 amp/hr) charged fairly well when boon docking.
Feb-12-2020 01:30 PM
jdc1 wrote:That will be totally dependent on your power usage. As mentioned above, 30ah would be less than 3 hours of TV at my house.
With no obstructions, it should be able keep my batteries (3-80 amp/hr) charged fairly well when boon docking.
Feb-12-2020 01:25 PM
Feb-12-2020 01:02 PM
allen8106 wrote:
I'm curious about how you added solar to the rig in 1 1/2 hours. Mine took days. You don't mention the battery monitor, inverter, shunt or any fusing.
Feb-12-2020 12:19 PM
Feb-12-2020 11:49 AM
Feb-12-2020 09:27 AM
naturist wrote:A 100W panel can put out 7A when it's aimed perfectly and using an MPPT controller. With 5 hours equivalent sun that's 35AH. With a PWM controller, it's more like 5 or 6A. If the panel is flat mounted knock off around 30%.
HThat battery can be well supplied by 100 watts of solar assuming full sunshine and that you use no more than the 40 amp hours the battery can supply without causing premature damage.
Feb-12-2020 08:13 AM
Feb-12-2020 05:35 AM
Feb-11-2020 06:56 PM
jdc1 wrote:Yosemite Sam1 wrote:jdc1 wrote:ppine wrote:
How long are you going out there for? Water weighs around 7.2 pounds per gallon. Train your crew to use less water as an alternative.
When I had my 37'motorhome, the 100 gallons would last just over 3 days, comfortably. 40 gallons is only good enough for 1-1/2 days, at most.
We must not be showering often enough to more than once a day.:E
We have a 52 gal capacity and we never ran out of water in our 4-day camping cycles.
In fact, I was about to buy an auxiliary water-bladder but never came to doing it because we don't run out of water anyways.
The wife is a retired nurse....she washes her hands when the wind blows.
Feb-11-2020 06:35 PM
Feb-11-2020 03:45 PM
rrupert wrote:ppine wrote:
How long are you going out there for? Water weighs around 7.2 pounds per gallon. Train your crew to use less water as an alternative.
Water weighs 8.3 pounds/gallon.
Feb-11-2020 02:00 PM
Yosemite Sam1 wrote:jdc1 wrote:ppine wrote:
How long are you going out there for? Water weighs around 7.2 pounds per gallon. Train your crew to use less water as an alternative.
When I had my 37'motorhome, the 100 gallons would last just over 3 days, comfortably. 40 gallons is only good enough for 1-1/2 days, at most.
We must not be showering often enough to more than once a day.:E
We have a 52 gal capacity and we never ran out of water in our 4-day camping cycles.
In fact, I was about to buy an auxiliary water-bladder but never came to doing it because we don't run out of water anyways.