โJul-09-2014 09:18 AM
โAug-01-2014 11:53 AM
PSW wrote:
Believe me: all 200 watts of solar will do is keep your batteries topped out assuming you use good battery management techniques. It won't be enough to really run anything.
โAug-01-2014 04:36 AM
โAug-01-2014 01:50 AM
dapperdan wrote:
My goal is to try and keep our 2 6 volt batteries close to full while parked at our storage lot (with no electricity). We have a residential fridge which, with an inverter will run a couple of days on our batteries or so the salesman said. I just want to be able to fire up the fridge before loading it up for a trip and NOT discharge the batteries too much, my thought is a couple of 100 watt panels will do the trick.
โJul-30-2014 07:47 PM
โJul-30-2014 02:46 PM
Harvey51 wrote:Where are you house batteries located? You can run the wiring from the roof down a sewage vent or fridge vent if that's adjacent to your battery location. Otherwise, i would use a box or fitting on the roof and seal it appropriately.
I ordered the Renogy 100 watt kit on Amazon. Ditto on the real world recommendation - it means a lot. I have a metal roof and will have trouble convincing myself to drill holes in it, though I'm sure a bit of caulking will keep them dry. I'm thinking about where to run the wires, too. How about winter - cover it or take it off?
โJul-30-2014 01:44 PM
โJul-27-2014 07:29 AM
PSW wrote:
dapperdan, we will always get a lot of opinions on these forums and that is a good thing. All I can say is that the Renogy systems worked well for me, 200 watts monocrystaline does all I need a solar system to do for me (keep my batteries up for boondocking) and I believe in the old KISS (Keep it simple, stupid) system for myself, since I may well qualify for the final S. Also, I have no intention on keeping my RV for thirty years (I would be a hundred years old) so I plan accordingly. AND, being cheap, I don't like to spend a lot when a little suffices. So, I am a happy little Okie.
Paul
โJul-27-2014 06:22 AM
โJul-27-2014 05:52 AM
PSW wrote:
I am going to install a 100 watt Renogy flexible solar panel to the top of my 2350 Phoenix Cruiser. It will supplement the existing 100 watt regular Renogy panel I installed earlier this year. The 100 watt does an OK job keeping the batteries charged when boondocking, but I need just "a wee bit more" power as Scottie used to say on Startrek.
This panel only weighs about four pounds and is 42" by 21" by about an eighth of an inch thick. Here it is:
http://www.amazon.com/Renogy%C2%AE-Monocrystalline-Bendable-Solar-Panel/dp/B00IK19VF6/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1404922295&sr=8-1&keywords=renogy+flexible+solar+panel
My question is this: what should I use to fasten this on the roof with?
On the first panel I installed, I made struts, used Z mounts, drilled into the roof and sealed all the mounting with Dicor. Since this one is light and flexible, it can be mounted directly flat on the roof and I don't know whether to use 3M tape, stick it down with DICOR or use some kind of exterior construction glue. Any comments or suggestions would be great. The diameter of the small grommets on the panel would only allow for using a screw of about 3/16" diameter if I drilled into the roof, which I would really like to avoid, so I would like just to stick it on there using something.
Thoughts?
PSW
โJul-26-2014 11:42 AM
PSW wrote:
what should I use to fasten this on the roof with?
PSW wrote:
On the first panel I installed, I made struts, used Z mounts,
PSW wrote:
Since this one is light and flexible, it can be mounted directly flat on the roof
PSW wrote:
The diameter of the small grommets on the panel would only allow for using a screw of about 3/16" diameter
PSW wrote:
This panel only weighs about four pounds
PSW wrote:
Some have been critical of the charge controller, but all I know is it works for me and can easily accomodate several of these panels.
โJul-26-2014 05:29 AM
โJul-25-2014 05:48 PM
โJul-19-2014 10:07 PM
โJul-19-2014 07:55 AM