You would be better off spending $20K on your own setup. 1000W of solar and 510AH of batteries won't run your AC for any length of time, and if you attempt it, you won't be able to refill your bank in a single day.
My two Dometic rooftop AC units pulled 2.7kW combined when actively cooling (compressors on, fans on high) my 39' Alpine. That would drain a 12V/510AH battery bank in around two hours, and 1000W of solar won't quite fill that bank in a day under ideal conditions with no load. If the compressors only run 50% of the time, you might get four hours. The math used for these figures:
- 12V * 510AH = 6120Wh, 6120Wh / 2700W = 2.26h, assuming no other loads
- 1000W * 6 solar hours = 6000W, which is less than the 6120Wh size of the bank
- You can generally expect 5-6 solar hours per day, depending on location and other factors
- I did have someone tell me that two of those Mach units pull 2400W together, but haven't personally verified -- that doesn't buy that much extra time
You could, of course, only run one AC unit. Indefinite AC on solar does not work out with current solar technology and rooftop RV AC units, but can be done with mini-splits (that's a whole separate and far more major project). There simply isn't enough real estate on RV roofs to make the math work, and with more real estate, you need more cooling, which requires more energy, so the issue remains as you size up.
You can purchase much more solar and battery than they are selling for $20K and have better quality components.
It's nice to see more than the conventional 200W systems, but this isn't enough to be self sufficient with all systems functioning on demand, and certainly doesn't justify the cost.
We have 2925kW of solar and a 48V battery bank that would be the equivalent of 1800AH@12V. Even with that, we had to move to mini-split AC units to be able to set the thermostat and forget about it. They use 1/3rd of the energy of the units they replaced, and perform a better job.
For what it's worth, we don't plug in, and only run the generator a few hours a month at most. We run everything as we please without worrying about consumption unless there are consecutive cloudy days. When those occur, we just make sure we have LP for the genset which is integrated to the rest of the system and starts automatically when certain conditions are met.
2000 Country Coach Magna 40',
4380W solar, 22.8kWh LiFePO4@48V, 450AH AGM@12V
2020 Jeep Wrangler Unlimited Rubicon 2.0T, cloaked on 37x13.5s