โNov-03-2015 07:57 AM
โNov-04-2015 07:28 PM
Jim@HiTek wrote:
I know that in my Class A rig the chassis battery draw is much, much more than 100mW (0.1 Watt). It's more like 12 Watt even with the salesman's switches 'Off'.
The draws are to the dash, which supplies the radio memory, the CO detector, and the propane leak detector. Then the steps, also stay powered. Some newer class A rigs have both a computerized tranni and engine which have memories that are, again, kept powered even with the salesman's switches 'Off'.
I think you have a unique rig if yours only draws 100mW while just sitting.
โNov-04-2015 07:01 AM
Kaz wrote:
Unless I'm missing something (very possible), all you need to is to offset the parasitic drain on the batteries, which is normally less than 100mW (mine is only about 50mW), plus the self-discharge (assume it's 5% per month for a lead-acid battery). That assumes everything in the coach is off and the only load is for the CO/propane detector, the clock battery, and things like that. 100mW x 24 hrs/day = 2.4 watt-hours/day. With a 70-amp-hour battery, assume a 5%/month self-discharge rate = 3.5 amp-hours/month, or roughly 40 watts/month, or 1.3 watt-hours per day. The total is around 3.7 watt-hours/day. Even at 50% efficiency, a 10-watt solar panel with an output for a couple hours per day would provide 10 watt-hours/day, which is way more than you need. That's why most commercial solar battery maintainers are all in the range of a few watts and work just fine.
Or, the easiest way is to do like other people suggest and buy something with excess capacity and then you don't have to worry about it.
Skip
โNov-04-2015 05:19 AM
โNov-04-2015 05:08 AM
Kaz wrote:
Unless I'm missing something (very possible), all you need to is to offset the parasitic drain on the batteries, which is normally less than 100mW (mine is only about 50mW), plus the self-discharge (assume it's 5% per month for a lead-acid battery). That assumes everything in the coach is off and the only load is for the CO/propane detector, the clock battery, and things like that. 100mW x 24 hrs/day = 2.4 watt-hours/day. With a 70-amp-hour battery, assume a 5%/month self-discharge rate = 3.5 amp-hours/month, or roughly 40 watts/month, or 1.3 watt-hours per day. The total is around 3.7 watt-hours/day. Even at 50% efficiency, a 10-watt solar panel with an output for a couple hours per day would provide 10 watt-hours/day, which is way more than you need. That's why most commercial solar battery maintainers are all in the range of a few watts and work just fine.
Or, the easiest way is to do like other people suggest and buy something with excess capacity and then you don't have to worry about it.
Skip
โNov-04-2015 01:54 AM
โNov-03-2015 08:20 PM
โNov-03-2015 07:47 PM
Golden_HVAC wrote:rickthescot wrote:
Sounds like a great idea. I guess asking for pictures again is not going to persuade you though. We are visual creatures and I don't think 1000 words will accomplish what one image will. You can do it, just one pic.
More pictures that I took a few days ago to post pictures of my solar panels, and their mounts. Some pictures are really close up pictures of the solar panel mounts, and give a clear picture of howrough the surface is.Golden_HVAC wrote:
Hi,
This is my front pair of panels. 120 watt mounted on a curved roof, 102" wide.
This is the mount it is held on with three rivets into the frame, and then the bottom half is 6" long aluminum, with nutsert in the upper piece, bolt you can not see from the outside edge pointing inward.
This picture shows the bigfoot panel mount sold by RvSolarElectric for $35 a set back in 1994. I wonder what they cost today?
This picture shows the panels tilted while I was working on the roof.
Fred.
Porsche or Country Coach!
If there's a WILL, I want to be in it!
โNov-03-2015 07:30 PM
Porsche or Country Coach!
If there's a WILL, I want to be in it!
โNov-03-2015 10:36 AM
โNov-03-2015 10:15 AM
โNov-03-2015 10:03 AM
โNov-03-2015 09:50 AM
โNov-03-2015 09:49 AM
harold1946 wrote:
I would also recommend 100 watts of solar and a dual bank controller. That would maintain both the house and chassis batteries quite easily.
โNov-03-2015 09:44 AM