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    Took the Solar Plunge

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Off-Topic & Non-Support Discussion
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    • ?
      Guest
      last edited by

      Yes sorry 10AWG maybe a 20 foot lead. May get the y-splitter since MC4 is standard. I do see different gauges MC4  like 12AWG but on ebay some are hard to tell.

      Here is the meter no housing
      http://www.ebay.com/itm/111296152208

      I think this in the description is quite amusing:

      Percentage of capacity and totem pole

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      • ?
        Guest
        last edited by

        Here is the bigger step up circuit i bought for 12V to 48:

        http://www.ebay.com/itm/161297901843

        Terminal Blocks on ebay=2 dollars
        Terminal Blocks at Northern Hardware=12 dollars

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        • ?
          Guest
          last edited by

          kejianshi: I really appreciate your reply. I posted late about distance. So 70ft. Would see extreme loss that is what i needed to (not)hear. I could mount the batteries on my temp lawn cart to make it heavier but winters are tuff -if i am reading that battery chart correctly. Like 40 percent off the top on really cold nights. So my shed was an alternative but at a distance.

          I was actually thinking of using a lawn/custom pvc cart to temp mount the panels to determine best location for a pole mount. Probably 2 panels. I am fabbing up a mount as they want premium money for steel parts and i am a stainless guy.

          y251.JPG
          y251.JPG_thumb

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          • K
            kejianshi
            last edited by

            For small installs that get exposed to weather, I like these:

            Morningstar SunSaver SS-6L-12V 6A, 12V Solar Charge Controller w/LVD (Gen3)

            http://www.altestore.com/store/Charge-Controllers/Solar-Charge-Controllers/PWM-Type-Solar-Charge-Controllers/Morningstar-Charge-Controllers-PWM/Morningstar-SunSaver-SS-6L-12V-6A-12V-Solar-Charge-Controller-wLVD-Gen3/p10505/?gclid=CjwKEAiA28ilBRCy5cXrgtfTxTISJABgX7E2zdDyBmMo1jzDc8vzdV3W4F10X3vqDQ35DZFX20kNqhoCFfzw_wcB

            Its a pulse width modulated charge controller.  I also has a built in conditioning circuit.  It won't raise the voltage above 14.2 volts or so.
            I'm not sure what type of controller you are using but if it goes through the same sort of charge cycle as most of them and includes a desulfication (sp) phase, it will make a mess of your AGM battery in short order.  Its better to use a rapid RF pulse for that.  I've had great luck with these.

            The morningstar MPPT controllers are also great.

            As for you distance problem, its best to collocate the batteries and panels (or close as possible).  How cold will it be getting?  Or how hot?

            Also, lead isn't lead…  Quick talk about differences.
            First lead purity - The solar type are super pure lead and the batteries are designed with low internal resistance so thay can accept charge at a very high rate, discharge at a high rate.
            Lead plate composition - Solar batteries plates are smooth and can endure very very deep discharge often.  Starting batteries are not smooth.  They have spongy like surface and are really only meant to be discharged 5% or so.  Most deep cycle batteries you get at a place like walmart are not very smooth plates and won't take many discharges especially beyond 50%

            Lastly, plate thickness.  True quality deep cycle batteries have very super thick hard plates.  This keeps the material from shedding away from the plates during deep cycling.  So the difference here is the quality batteries can endure greater than 50% discharges for years and years (thousands of discharges) while a average department store deep cycle battery might endure 50 or 60 deep discharges at most.  So later do keep that in mind.

            With the batteries you have, I'd recommend not testing them too much.  I'd try to keep the cycling light.  Say 20% or less which might be easy enough since you have a pretty large bank.

            I have not tested LIFEPO4 much but the thing I like about those is the cycle life and that they can be cycled to nearly 100% without killing them.
            The thing I don't like about them is the charge control and discharge control mechanisms that you need with the battery.  It limits how many AMPS I can pull off the battery safely and the rate I can charge at.

            As for the batteries and COLD weather, this is much easier problem that very hot weather.
            When you are charging batteries, they heat a bit, so if you put an insulation jacket on the batteries they should be fine.  This is especially true for AGM.  They do well in cold weather when insulated.  If you throw up 3 more solar panels, you will have enough for your batteries.

            I charge at 10 amps but My batteries can take as much as 50amps per each 50AH battery.  Exide batteries can really take a beating.  In some cases I have 4x as much solar panel as you charging 1/8 the battery.  I do prefer to have a very large battery bank when possible though because it prevents you from having to deeply discharge the cells.

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            • ?
              Guest
              last edited by

              What about the backside's of the panel?? I work on boats and that open back just don't cut it. Was thinking of enclosing it with some sheetmetal to help reduce the "Sail effect" That 1.5" Lip is unsat design in my opinion. The cheap panels i got really need angle re-enforcements in corners for me to feel confident about them withstanding 100mph winds..Flimsy lightweight aluminum it seems. I may do some bracing as well where the pole mount meets the back.
              Is tracking worth it??

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              • K
                kejianshi
                last edited by

                No tracking.  I wouldn't even say "tracking" and "100 MPH wind" in the same sentence.

                I'd say mount the panels either flush with some other sturdy rigid surface or box them in so that wind cant get under them to create lift.

                Where EXACTLY are you mounting the panels and why EXACTLY can't the batteries be mounted very close to them?

                I've built south facing solar generators that are mounted on a wooden "wedge" of about 26 degrees sitting directly on the ground with the batteries under the panel and the whole box anchored for exactly same reasons - To keep the wind from carrying it away, to keep all components close and make cleaning snow off the panels easy.

                Generally there is no advantage in raising the panels other than to keep clear of shadows if they exist or to avoid flooding damage.

                Elaborating on the length of wire run.  The high voltage AC side can be long.  70 feet is ok.  Only the low volt DC wiring must be kept short.

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                • ?
                  Guest
                  last edited by

                  Yea anything is possible but you are correct. Stabilizing that weight would need a mighty positioner at 100mph. Truthfully i thought about a ground hugger but i dunno if i like it. I may mount more equipment on the pole. And yes i could build the battery boxes right onboard for stability. I liked the variable angle is why i chose the pole mount. I am not married to it. I was planning on mounting some other gear onboard like a weather station(weewx) and antennas.

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                  • K
                    kejianshi
                    last edited by

                    Weather stations can still be mounted on poles even if the solar, battery and inverter are on the ground.

                    People mount solar panels in the air all the time and get away with it, but 100mph wind….  Sounds like recipe for disaster.

                    So, I'm a tiny bit confused.  Is this going to be on a boat or a yard?

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                    • ?
                      Guest
                      last edited by

                      Smallish Yard just a home project…
                      I appreciate your system sizing advice. So you saying roughly one 12V-125ah battery per -100W/5A max@17V/12V panel? or 4 panels for 500ah of battery? All roughly.
                      I don't plan on inverters. Just DC loads... I seriously eyeballed the 200W class panels by the big names. I just want to experiment for now.
                      I may just use an old lawnmower deck for temp mounting of batteries and panel.
                      And i just pulled the 100mph figure out of the air. My point was i want something sturdy and not blowing away at 70mph gust.
                      Thanks for the great advice.

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                      • chpalmerC
                        chpalmer
                        last edited by

                        My cousin did a tracking unit that only utilizes freon gas and properly placed "exposure tubes" and air shocks from a vehicle. Got it from "Popular Mechanics" magazine from the 70's  He uses it to this day and for the last 25 years.

                        It supplies 30 amps in the top of the day and supplied their family of 4 off grid all this time till the kids moved out.

                        Luckily he messed up the gas and the panel makes it way back to the east overnight and is waiting for the sun first thing.  Id love to find that article.

                        He is on top of the hill and the wind has never been an issue.  I suppose he got lucky.

                        Deka makes terrific solar batteries as well.

                        Triggering snowflakes one by one..
                        Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-4590T CPU @ 2.00GHz on an M400 WG box.

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                        • K
                          kejianshi
                          last edited by

                          You have to measure the current coming off your panels to know what you are getting.

                          A 100w panel in full sun at the equator will probably get you 100w or 8 hours or so.

                          In some northern place, it may only put out 30 or 50 watts and may not get many hours of sun.

                          So, you have to figure, up north you will need 2x the panel (at least) as panel advertising my lead you to believe.

                          You only get a few hours of sunlight - So, lets say for instance its 4 hours average for your place.

                          So you discharge 24/7 but only charge for 4.  so your charge rate needs to be 6x higher than your average load.

                          Not only that you vane to compensate for load.  A great lead acid battery only stores about 60% of what you put into it.  40% may be lost.

                          So you have to take your original calculation of 6x the load and multiply by x 2.

                          So, if you average load was 10w you would need about 120w input during your 4 hours of sun to keep things working well.

                          So yeah - More panels.

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                          • K
                            kejianshi
                            last edited by

                            Deka  - I've heard good things but have never used them.  No experience with those.

                            Good thing is I'm pretty sure what you have, if you add abit more solar panel, will easily run a small 10w pfsense (-:

                            (The above comment is a blatant attempt to prevent deletion of thread due to irrelevance to pfsense boards)

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                            • ?
                              Guest
                              last edited by

                              Thanks for every-ones advice. I'm sure the Renogy panel i got probably only work half their rated capacity, I saw Amazon writeups stating their inefficiency. For $150 for the kit it was worth it for me just to learn with.

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                              • stephenw10S
                                stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                                last edited by

                                When we looked into sun tracking most advice (and our own conclusions) was that it's cheaper and far more reliable to just add panels. My friend adjusts the angle of his panels a few times a year manually. Never tried a maximum power point controller, kept meaning to bulid one.

                                This is general discussion:

                                Feel free to talk about anything and everything in this board.

                                :)

                                Steve

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                                • K
                                  kejianshi
                                  last edited by

                                  I need to build another big one soon.  I'm thinking that in the Philippines I can totally disconnect from the grid if I want - At 25 cent per kw/hour it should be nearly three times as economical as in the USA.

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                                  • ?
                                    Guest
                                    last edited by

                                    Would you build an array with a "Branded panel", Hoping in 20 years they will still be around to honor warranty? Or would you go generic.. Like you said earlier Poly looks to getting better.

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                                    • K
                                      kejianshi
                                      last edited by

                                      Great question.

                                      I like reliable name brands.

                                      My Astro panels are like new and its been a long long time.

                                      I think kyocera might be a good compromise between efficiency/price/quality.

                                      I'd bet they will keep working for decades unless someone hit them with a baseball bat.

                                      If you don't mind spending a little extra, With BP Solar you can't go wrong.

                                      I'd probably go with the Kyocera cells myself though.

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                                      • stephenw10S
                                        stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                                        last edited by

                                        We used BP Solar panels but only because my friend already had them. They must be at least 20 years old and have fallen off thd boat or been hit by stuff countless times, still going strong.

                                        Steve

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                                        • K
                                          kejianshi
                                          last edited by

                                          Yeah - My kids used to walk and play on my panels in the back yard  - I wish I'd taken pics.  Its near 20 years and they are still going also.

                                          The frames, glass and backing are as important as the cells themselves.

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                                          • ?
                                            Guest
                                            last edited by

                                            "pfsense" doesn't occur anywhere in this thread.  Perhaps it belongs elsewhere.

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