โFeb-03-2015 10:00 AM
โFeb-04-2015 11:28 AM
westend wrote:You have a keeper. BTW, it's still LCD, just the backlighting is LED instead of fluorescant.
FWIW, my two yr old 32" Magnavox LED screen connsumes 33W in standard mode.
โFeb-04-2015 04:44 AM
โFeb-03-2015 10:43 PM
โFeb-03-2015 08:00 PM
Porsche or Country Coach!
If there's a WILL, I want to be in it!
โFeb-03-2015 06:12 PM
โFeb-03-2015 05:39 PM
โFeb-03-2015 05:15 PM
2oldman wrote:Fine right now but you may run out of dark in the Summer.
I can limit myself to 10 hours of nighttime TV.
โFeb-03-2015 03:55 PM
einstein2nd wrote:
You are reading out of context and no where did I say such a statement.
โFeb-03-2015 02:48 PM
โFeb-03-2015 02:32 PM
โFeb-03-2015 02:31 PM
โFeb-03-2015 02:23 PM
einstein2nd wrote:Incorrect. The good panel cannot exceed Isc and will be just fine. A fuse would be rated for more than Isc and would not blow. 3 parallel panels means the damaged panel would receive 2xIsc and that's when you want a fuse on that panel to blow.
Example (more like a what if):
Two panel system in parallel: One panel is damage and water sets in and shorts out internal wires. The damaged panel acts like a load and draws from the other panel which will burn out if not protected.
โFeb-03-2015 02:22 PM
smkettner wrote:einstein2nd wrote:2oldman wrote:Listen, if you can't figure that out... go to school!einstein2nd wrote:What are the batteries for?
Limit TV after the sun goes down: No Sun, No Power.
Read what "KJINTF" said about batteries.KJINTF wrote:
It will easily keep two 6Vdc batteries charged up if you have the sunshine
and not too many other loads
I think KJINTF just said to limit power to get the battery charged.
Then einstein2nd says to get the tv on during the daylight and off at night.
So which is it? ๐
โFeb-03-2015 02:06 PM