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Wish I could take a napLooks like a day off. Rain and thunder showers at present. Good for the gardens. Might be a good day to catch up on paper work, clean the garage, take a nap, etc... Later.
I took a little nap about 8:30 this morning. But I went to bed early last night and got up at 3:30, so I felt like I deserved some ZZZZZs.Wish I could take a nap![]()
I'm using free electricity to cook chicken and veggies in my crockpot today.
Don't you have a 120vac automotive battery charger already? If so, just use it to fully charge the batteries, then disconnect it. They'd hold a charge for quite a while. You could give them a quick recharge every so often to keep them fully charged if needed. Or get a $15 trickle charger from Harbor Freight to keep them fully charged all the time. You'd need an inverter too, to convert 12vdc to 120vac. A cheap modified sine wave works with simple electrical devices, but some things require a more expensive true sine wave inverter to work. Or not be damaged.I would like to get into solar power, more or less as an educational project.
I thought it would be great to set up a solar panel and recharge my tool batteries for "free." However, when I looked into the least expensive solar kit from Harbor Freight, it was about $150 for the setup. Looking into the numbers, I discovered that it cost me about 1-2 cents to recharge each of my tool batteries using grid power. That comes out to 7500 recharged batteries at the high end to make up that initial $150.00 investment.
Considering I recharge maybe 10 batteries per month on average, that comes out to a payback period of 62.5 years!
So, I did not buy the solar kit I was looking at just for its limited use of recharging tool batteries. Obviously, if a person lived off grid, you would have many uses for solar power and that would make solar a more viable option.
A few months ago, I watched a YouTube video where some guy was advocating most people would be better off with grid power, backed up by a battery bank power station and a gas/diesel generator in case the grid power goes down. In his example, his battery banks would keep his house running for about 3 days off grid. If grid power was still out at that time, he would run his generator for a few hours every day to recharge the battery bank. For his needs, he looked at spending about $70,000 for a whole house solar setup, or about $2,000 for a battery bank and generator setup.
For him, it made much more sense to go the battery bank and generator route. He was advocating that a battery bank backup system was a better economical solution for most people who have access to grid power. After all, if you have grid power, the chances of not having power for more than a day or two is pretty low. If you lived in hurricane zones, and maybe had to go a week or longer without grid power, the generator and a tank of diesel would last a long time.
My idea would be to have some kind of a portable battery bank that was plugged into my car's 12v outlet and recharging all the time while I'm driving. If the house lost grid power, I could just unplug the battery bank from the car and hook it up to my house power box.
At any rate, cooking chicken and veggies from a solar panel is pretty cool. Way to go!
White on the inside also makes it easier to see mites that hide in the woodwork. I painted the inside of my coop white too. One coat of primer, then a coat of semi gloss white I used to paint the trim on my house. Semi gloss makes it easier to clean.Speaking of painting... We added onto the coop this year. We bought exterior siding of some kind. Not plywood, due to the cost.
A 5 gallon bucket of white medium grade paint was about the same price as a gallon of mixed color paint, again, medium grade. My coop is brown ("chocolate bon-bon" is the name, lol) on the outside, white on the inside. I like the white interior to keep it as bright as possible, especially in the dark days of winter.
Knowing that new wood soaks up paint like a sponge, I painted both sides of the siding white, two coats. The third coat was white for the inside, brown for the outside. I still have half a gallon of brown left over; enough to touch up the old area of the coop, and maybe do it all.
I still have 2/3 of the bucket of white paint left.![]()
Don't you have a 120vac automotive battery charger already? If so, just use it to fully charge the batteries, then disconnect it. They'd hold a charge for quite a while. You could give them a quick recharge every so often to keep them fully charged if needed. Or get a $15 trickle charger from Harbor Freight to keep them fully charged all the time. You'd need an inverter too, to convert 12vdc to 120vac. A cheap modified sine wave works with simple electrical devices, but some things require a more expensive true sine wave inverter to work. Or not be damaged.
The chicken and veggies were delicious! But I dislike cleaning the old Crockpots that don't have removable cooking vessels. Mine must be pushing 30 years old, but still works great.
Yeah, I'm not going to save any money to speak of on my electric bill. I use very little as it is. Last month my actual electric usage cost was only $20.
Having a backup battery bank with inverter does sound like a good way to go for power backup, if you don't already have generator.
We bought exterior siding of some kind. Not plywood, due to the cost.
White on the inside also makes it easier to see mites that hide in the woodwork. I painted the inside of my coop white too. One coat of primer, then a coat of semi gloss white I used to paint the trim on my house. Semi gloss makes it easier to clean.