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Solar, is it worthwhile?

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Kevin D Pem

RVF 5K Club
Joined
Jul 29, 2020
Messages
5,139
Location
AZ
RV Year
1984
RV Make
Alpinelite
RV Length
26'
TOW/TOAD
2016 Ram 1500
Fulltimer
Yes
I watch this guy often. I don't agree with everything he published, but then, I guess that is across the board.

Anyhow thought those contemplating solar might like it.

 
If you plan on boondocking or even staying in truckstops or Walmarts overnight and you can afford a solar system with Li batteries, I would say yes. I cannot sleep through the night without worrying about how far my batteriesbwill be down in the morning, unless I run the generator all noght long (slow money bleed method). The problem is when the truckstop is full and rv’s are packed mirror to mirror, I could be down more than 50% by morning and damaging the batteries.

so, if I were in a position to do solar and Li, I would.
 
If you plan on boondocking or even staying in truckstops or Walmarts overnight and you can afford a solar system with Li batteries, I would say yes. I cannot sleep through the night without worrying about how far my batteriesbwill be down in the morning, unless I run the generator all noght long (slow money bleed method). The problem is when the truckstop is full and rv’s are packed mirror to mirror, I could be down more than 50% by morning and damaging the batteries.

so, if I were in a position to do solar and Li, I would.
I keep trying!

To be responsible, I push what I live. I have 3000w of used pv. At a conservative 20% efficiency, and 1000 watts of energy per meter square. When I find something like this video, I pass it on. Being responsible eliminates new panels, and LiFePo4.
In days past collecting heat energy, and using phase shift storage, was one of my studies. Passive daytime heat has and still does intrigue me. With little space for more solar, something 4 times better at collecting the sun's power, may be the ticket.

I understand the challenge storage holds.
 
I’ve been struggling with the idea of installing Solar on the New RV. My last RV had lots of solar and LiFePo batteries. When we were traveling and didn’t need AC it was great. The downside is we never used the generator and when we needed the genset it wasn’t happy.
That experience got me powering up the generator every month to exercise it.
So, why don’t I just have a large battery and use the generator to keep it topped off?
That is where we are now, large battery and are going to use the generator and see how it goes.
 
The batteries on our trailer seem to be dead, so I’m pondering Lithium Ion. The dealer mentioned that it would last substantially longer than lead acid. Has anyone here done this switch?

The fast charging seems worthwhile enough for the switch.
 
I’ve been struggling with the idea of installing Solar on the New RV. My last RV had lots of solar and LiFePo batteries. When we were traveling and didn’t need AC it was great. The downside is we never used the generator and when we needed the genset it wasn’t happy.
That experience got me powering up the generator every month to exercise it.
So, why don’t I just have a large battery and use the generator to keep it topped off?
That is where we are now, large battery and are going to use the generator and see how it goes.
The reason I preach again that is!

The last 10% of charge is at float charge rate. Most people cut short the charge because they believe that last bit doesn't matter, but it does. If you use lead not achieving 100 % limits you to 40% usable capacity. A solar system shines when considering that float charge, even when it is 500w, and reduces generator run times by hours.

Because most generator users, in short, neglect their batteries they have a shortened battery lifetime.

I believe full service solar is great for some people, but just supplementing with solar makes more sense for most!
 
I’ve been struggling with the idea of installing Solar on the New RV. My last RV had lots of solar and LiFePo batteries. When we were traveling and didn’t need AC it was great. The downside is we never used the generator and when we needed the genset it wasn’t happy.
I have an LP generator. It cranks right up after long periods of non-use, even years of non-use. That is why I opted to install an LP generator. It also sucks up a 20# LP tank every 8 to 9 hours running at a 50% load (it always runs at 50% or less because that is how I sized it). You can add an LP fuel conversion kit to many gas/diesel generators and it works just fine.
 
It Depends

I've camped since I was a kid from sleeping on the ground to the back of a pick up to a pop up trailer all of which had no power. Then a camper to a 5th wheel to a Motorhome all of which had at least one battery and some form of generator. Now that I'm in my 60's comfort ranks very high on my priorities list. The last 25 days in Texas have been over 100.

We rarely boondock for multiple days (like once or twice a year) But we do HH several times a year. We are almost always plugged in and when not almost always need more juice than solar can provide. So is the expense of panels and batteries good for us? Probably not

We are leaving in a couple of days for Colorado to get out of this Texas heat. 2 nights in a HH running the generator the whole time. Plugging in when we get there. For us the 10K generator makes more sense.
 
Is solar worthwhile? I certainly this it is. I put 1800 watts of solar on the roof and replaced the 400ah (200ah usable) FLA batteries with 600ah of Li and don't regret it for a second! At first I thought we'd need to change the way we use our electric, to be more conservative, but soon discovered the batteries were back to 100% by noon the next day. The only other significant change was to toss the incandescent lights and go 100% LED. Our longest off-grid camping was 15 days near Quartzsite before needing to empty holding tanks.
 
Is solar worthwhile? I certainly this it is. I put 1800 watts of solar on the roof and replaced the 400ah (200ah usable) FLA batteries with 600ah of Li and don't regret it for a second! At first I thought we'd need to change the way we use our electric, to be more conservative, but soon discovered the batteries were back to 100% by noon the next day. The only other significant change was to toss the incandescent lights and go 100% LED. Our longest off-grid camping was 15 days near Quartzsite before needing to empty holding tanks.

How much does your battery tend to drain overnight? Do you have a fridge that runs on 12V?

I’m trying to figure out if ours are running normally.
 
How much does your battery tend to drain overnight? Do you have a fridge that runs on 12V?

I’m trying to figure out if ours are running normally.
Is your fridge a compressor fridge?
 
Is your fridge a compressor fridge?

Yes. I seem to have maybe solved the issue we were having simply by adding some distilled water to the batteries (2 Interstate SRM-24 batteries). I unplugged the trailer before I topped the water up, and it’s sitting in front of t house in the sun. The battery level dropped to 2/3rds this morning (with the fridge running), and is back to 100% now (reading 13.4V).



C3C8A895-6670-4290-AD42-F8049C89F017.jpeg
 
Batteries are usually at about 78 - 82% SOC in the morning. We use lights, the TV, Sat radio, water pump, Keurig (2 morning cups); pretty much anything we'd use if plugged in. I replaced the Norcold 1210 cooling unit with a JC Refrigeration Home - JC Refrigeration 12v compressor fridge and also have a 12v Dometic CFX50 in the basement we use as a freezer.
 
How much does your battery tend to drain overnight? Do you have a fridge that runs on 12V?

I’m trying to figure out if ours are running normally.
Yes your system is running normally!!! Of course your normal may not be everyone's normal.

What is the amp hour rating of your bank? My guess is your fridge draws a minimum 45 watts, likely more. That's 4 amps drained from your bank at night per hour! So once again, how big is the bank? How long is the night? How many times do you open the fridge for a cold one? How many people stand in front of the fridge with door open trying to choose what to snack on!

Being over generous 650 amp hours might be available with1800 watts of panels in the winter months, and only if the panels are not flat on the roof. This may work out if your day light usage offers charge capacity!!!

Once again normal is a very personal thing!

As an example:

Today I woke up before daylight. I put the tea kettle on my induction cook top at 1000 watts I turned on my espresso maker at 800 watts both units did their jobs in roughly 8 minutes each. The breakfast I cooked on the butane stove top. Later in the day while under full sun, I turned on the induction cook top to boil/ rinse my rice before cooking. Roughly 10 minutes at 1000 watts. Then cooked the rice in my rice cooker, 450 watts roughly 15 minutes. Then add ingredients for my casserole for enough time to warm it all up, another 6 minutes.

My fridge and freezer pumping away when needed during this time!!!

I didn't expect to have my 400ah (12volt equivalent) battery bank to be topped off today,but my voltage is sitting at 25.4 volts 4 hours after the sun set(24 volt system)!!! I run 3000 watts of solar. Today could not be considered my normal, however, the bank seems to be telling me it is doable. My battery bank is carbon lead thin plate battery technology. Before the sun rises I will know better if my batteries took a hit after today's splurge!
 
Update!
This morning the batteries sit at 25.1 while still dark out! That means the surface tension is gone, and for those using 12volt systems 12.55 volts. Yes my inverter runs 24/7 !!! Made my coffee this am, same process as yesterday, with the electric tea kettle instead of induction cook top 1200 watts. Still in the dark!!!

The sun peeks over the horizon, panels producing under 5 amps and freezer kicking in, batteries holding at 24.8 volts. That means under load the 12volt equivalent is 12.4 volts. For reference the freezer draws 2 amps or 240 watts! With the math 10 amps at 24volts. More draw than the panels are producing.

Although lithium has a slight advantage in internal resistance. These lead carbon batteries are much better than other AGM products, with a much higher cycle life than lithium.
The question then is, is 1000us a good price to pay for 400ah of lead carbon 7000 cycle life batteries??? Guess you know my opinion!!!
 
This discussion is between people talking about PV energy and generators. I don't see how making hot water helps top off any type of battery. Other then not needing electrical energy to produce it(hot water). Still has the storage and transporting it around gracefully issue.....so where did you want this discussion to go Kevin? No one is going to bolt a box filled with pex and covered with an old window to the top of their class A. And run the lines down thru the roof also? Well, most won't....
I considered doing this years ago at my sticks and bricks in Maine. I instead watched what others had done and experienced in my particular climate/area and stayed conventional. Much like wood heat, there is no free lunch. The amount of labor(yours) in wood heat in a cold climate is usually underestimated by novices. Storage, quality(type of wood and dryness), access to heated areas and ash dumping along with chimney fires/appliances to burn it make wood heat less then ideal for many people. But I digress....lol
 
This discussion is between people talking about PV energy and generators. I don't see how making hot water helps top off any type of battery. Other then not needing electrical energy to produce it(hot water). Still has the storage and transporting it around gracefully issue.....so where did you want this discussion to go Kevin? No one is going to bolt a box filled with pex and covered with an old window to the top of their class A. And run the lines down thru the roof also? Well, most won't....
I considered doing this years ago at my sticks and bricks in Maine. I instead watched what others had done and experienced in my particular climate/area and stayed conventional. Much like wood heat, there is no free lunch. The amount of labor(yours) in wood heat in a cold climate is usually underestimated by novices. Storage, quality(type of wood and dryness), access to heated areas and ash dumping along with chimney fires/appliances to burn it make wood heat less then ideal for many people. But I digress....lol
I reference stuff like that to help illustrate efficiency as well as help people think!!! Think in terms of parables! A story is like a picture!!! It captures the imagination.

I suspect you got the meaning presented. Who other than, well, someone like me, in my humble "trailer" would even think of such modification? However my 1800 dollar box Beggs for experimentation! As we speak I have drawings for solar assisted floor heat to keep me warm without using propane!

I like to believe that this is a site for more than high end MHs, I may be wrong!!
 
Hmmm, most are not set up semi permanently in one spot. And floor heat is another area I know enough about to be dangerous. As with other things, it depends.
 
Hmmm, most are not set up semi permanently in one spot. And floor heat is another area I know enough about to be dangerous. As with other things, it depends.
Spent to many years as a nomad to understand what you mean by that! Your knowledge on oasis makes me wonder what you mean by the other!

For what it's worth my consideration of water as a heating medium is based on my desire to dump mass to keep me mobile. I have spent most of the last 20 years playing with ideas. No it's not what you think! I like projects, they keep me happy, and sane, if there truly is such a thing!
 
Radiant heat is much more difficult then just heating water and circulating it. Transfer rates, temps, and other factors make it tricky.
 
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