nhall760 wrote:
I have a 2007 Artic Fox 22g trailer.I am looking to upgrade the power to use a solar power system. I am wondering what systems I could get or how I should go about installing one.
An energy audit is always a good idea, but it may or may not be needed, it's 2007 so you have a few questions depending on what you have as options. How do you want to use it? Are you planning to use the microwave when boon docking or are you only going to use 12V appliances? what batteries do you have and how many AH are they.
If you don't want to run 120v equipment then it's simple light, heat, water pump etc. That's how my camper is set up and I use about 36 AH overnight running the furnace when it's around or just below freezing so I went with a 325-watt solar panel and two GC2 batteries which were later upgraded to LFP.
My 5th wheel, however, is set up to be able to use the microwave, kurieg, and tv's a little each day so it had four 6V batteries and 480 watts of solar which I would recommend as a minimum (I have plans to upgrade the panels to at least double what I have).
for me I always go over what I need on the solar side, a bigger controller is only slightly more, and panels are the cheapest part. so, if you do your calculation and see that you need 500w of panel get 800. It will allow you to top up your batteries a little faster and give you a bit of a boost on cloudy days.
Buying premade kits is extremely expensive and if you can't do it your self find a mobile RV repair guy who will charge by the hour or a decent rate to install the equipment you buy.
You will hear a lot of people recommend Victron, if you are not on a budget ya they are good, personally I think they are way overpriced, but they work. I went with a renogy MPPT solar controler, then I sourced my own panels from a solar company. I recommend whatever brand you end up getting, for the controler to be MPPT and size the next size up so you can add more panels down the road if needed, and for your panels to be 24V split cell panels. for the actual size I took the dimensions of a couple sizes of panel and made carboard cutouts then I went on the roof and laid them out to see what I could fit up there. My theory is I would rather have one 350 watt panel than three or four 100 watt panels but sometimes you don't have the room for that.
2014 F350 6.7 Platinum
2016 Cougar 330RBK
1991 Slumberqueen WS100