โFeb-04-2014 09:58 PM
โFeb-07-2014 09:39 AM
โFeb-07-2014 09:26 AM
NinerBikes wrote:The live data appears to be from one of the various solar radiation monitoring stations. On his first link is a map of the US with the various "sun hours". Somewhere (might be on that website) on the internetz I found where you can enter a zip code and it would give you the nearest town that you could use to figure how many sun hours per day you would get in a given month. Where I live it's 5.7 sun hours in the summer. You can take the output of your panels and multiply it by the amount of sun hours to get a good gesstimate of your daily amp hour haul minus the solar irradiance (some people have solar meters to measure that).
What data base are you using on that map, from what geographical area?
โFeb-07-2014 09:14 AM
red31 wrote:Nice find!
Live data!
http://www.nrel.gov/midc/
โFeb-07-2014 09:12 AM
red31 wrote:NinerBikes wrote:red31 wrote:
I took a look at solar radiation maps for the time of year and locations I'm interested in visiting and came up with a multiplier of 5 (kwh/m^m/day). Imp x 5 >= to my usage
worth quoting... Care to share where you found this information with us? a 500% uprate factor?
Live data!
http://www.nrel.gov/midc/
โFeb-07-2014 08:44 AM
NinerBikes wrote:red31 wrote:
I took a look at solar radiation maps for the time of year and locations I'm interested in visiting and came up with a multiplier of 5 (kwh/m^m/day). Imp x 5 >= to my usage
worth quoting... Care to share where you found this information with us? a 500% uprate factor?
โFeb-07-2014 08:42 AM
โFeb-07-2014 08:24 AM
red31 wrote:
I took a look at solar radiation maps for the time of year and locations I'm interested in visiting and came up with a multiplier of 5 (kwh/m^m/day). Imp x 5 >= to my usage
โFeb-07-2014 02:34 AM
โFeb-06-2014 05:51 PM
tplife wrote:
Many contemporary solar installations utilize no-maintenance AGM batteries. They are rated safe for use inside your rig, so there's no need to mount them outside or remove them to avoid casual theft - they can be mounted under the dinette or inside of cabinets at any angle without water levels to check, battery trays or venting. And their many advantages can mean their higher cost is worth the payback.
โFeb-06-2014 05:36 PM
โFeb-06-2014 04:42 PM
โFeb-06-2014 04:29 PM
OregonTRX4 wrote:NinerBikes wrote:
What is your intent... to maintain the batteries fully charged while in storage?
Disconnect the battery from the trailer in storage, buy a PWM charge controller on ebay for $10, and a 40 w panel for storage.
40w 12v panel
Buy a bigger panel if you want to recharge your batteries while camping. Calculate your daily amp usage first, then buy panels. 1 to 1.5 watts per amp you use per day.
Extensive selections of 12v panels.
I have two standard 12v deep cycle batteries but I don't have their specs right now. I would be using this system to charge my batteries while camping. My Honda eu2000i would be used for the microwave etc. I like the kits because they come setup already.
โFeb-06-2014 03:17 PM
red31 wrote:NinerBikes wrote:
Calculate your daily amp usage first, then buy panels. 1 to 1.5 watts per amp you use per day.
I don't understand this math.
If I used 40 ah/day and bought a 60 watt panel I'd be loosing ever day unless I was in S AZ in June!
โFeb-06-2014 02:47 PM
NinerBikes wrote:
Calculate your daily amp usage first, then buy panels. 1 to 1.5 watts per amp you use per day.