Anyone using solar energy in their coops?

ih66series

Chirping
8 Years
Jan 26, 2011
217
0
99
Altoona, PA
I am thinking about getting electricity in my coop. The coop is about 30 yards from the house, so I decided it may be easier to put a solar panel on the roof. This sounds pricey but it isn't so bad. About $235 total from Northern Tool with all of the components such as panel, charge controller, battery and inverter. I want to run lights and a fan.


Does anyone else use solar energy?
 
Not for the chickens, but we just installed it on the pony's run-in shed. We did not go with a kit, preferring to buy the pieces separately. With a 50 watt panel, marine battery, inverter and charge controller it was about $500.

Be sure to do all the math first! In particular, look carefully at how much power your fan needs.

I've got a 14" sealed motor fan (granted, probably more than you're going to want for a chicken coop,) and I'm having trouble with it running down the battery. We'll have to add a second panel.

My ideal situation is to end each sunny day with a fully charged battery, which means the panels need to supply enough to run the fan _and_ charge the battery back up for anything that was used after the panels stopped working the previous evening.

To get that to work, I'm going to have to put the fan on a thermostat so that if a storm comes along and cools things off (and blocks out the sun) the fan will turn off.

-Wendy
 
Quote:
What do you get for that price? I see a 60 watt kit for $300 without a battery. That would run a fluorescent lamp or a number of LED lamps for a while. I don't know about a fan, that would probably be a bit shy of powering even a 1/10 HP fan for any amount of time.

This topic gets brought up often. Many find that it is too expensive to create a system to power what they want. Some LED lights are feasible at a reasonable cost, but anything that uses an appreciable amount of power is going to be very expensive to run on solar.

Do I use solar energy? Yes. Our hen house is a large pole barn with an insulated ceiling and dark colored roof. I have air intakes installed in the ceiling that allows the ventilation system to pull warm air from the attic from autumn to spring when we could use some supplemental heat in there.
 
It seems to me that running a buried line 90 feet would be easy enough. A 220 from the main panel to a sub with a few breakers. Why not have an electrician give you a quote?
 
I have electricity available in my coop, but only used it for the heat lamp when the girls were small. I like to leave some light on in there at night, so I just charge up those cheap solar landscape lights in the day and my husband made holders on the wall in the coop where I put them at night. Works great. Low, low tech.
 
I've been thinking about solar, too. Here is an idea I want to pursue for a fan next summer: http://www.amazon.com/Solar-Roof-vent-Shed-Greenhouse/dp/B001C89GV8 . As for lighting, I've been thinking about buying some of those solar yard lights, then adding lengths of wire so that I can mount the solar panel on the exterior of the coop and mount the light on the inside.

I should say that at this point, it's all in my head; I haven't yet begun to see if these ideas are feasible.
 

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