Nyhillbillies
Crowing
Does anyone have experience with unsolicited mail solicitations for solar panel installation? Do they keep you hooked into the grid?
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I have always been interested in solar but never had the time to really dive in. I'm realizing that I have a similar area to illuminate at this other poster.... I don't suppose we could expand on this 2-lightbulb project or do a small tutorial post, for the greenhorns (which I definitely am!)?Ah, so it's inside? I don't mean fully-enclosed, but covered overhead so as to preclude the use of off-the-shelf solar LEDs with integrated motion sensors. It sounds like you only need the area illuminated for short periods at a time rather than all night, so it sounds like you'd need just 2 or 3 100W-equivalent LED fixtures (or thereabouts), which typically draw around 13W). That should be very easy to power with a single 100W solar panel and a 50Ah lead-acid battery. You can find DC versions of those that would eliminate the need for an inverter, though you'd still need a (relatively inexpensive) charge controller. If you want it lit for more than an hour per night then you'd need more batteries, or a single bigger one.
That's not possible unless you're only using the lights during the daytime. The solar panels only produce electricity when the sun is shining, so that energy has to be stored somewhere if you're going to use it later to power lights (or anything else) when there's not sunlight to produce a current in the panels. If the panels are wired directly to the lighting fixtures and you use those lights when the sun isn't shining then those fixtures have batteries (and charge controllers) built into them, which is the case with all of the all-in-one solar powered lights.I don't think our other solar lights have any of that stuff. They're wired right to the panels I think, don't think there are any charge controllers and definitely no batteries or motion sensors.
I think a beginner's tutorial of any real usefulness (and that isn't grossly oversimplified) is beyond the scope of a discussion forum thread...unless the OP wants to devote the time and effort to such a considerable task. Perhaps in this case the better approach is to just define the parameters of the problem that you're trying to solve, identify the options for doing so and then just take it from there on a case-by-case basis.I have always been interested in solar but never had the time to really dive in. I'm realizing that I have a similar area to illuminate at this other poster.... I don't suppose we could expand on this 2-lightbulb project or do a small tutorial post, for the greenhorns (which I definitely am!)?
That is a question that is going to vary from each place. How big is your area, how dark is it? weeds around? How about YOUR eyes, what might be fine for me, is dark ass tripping hazard for you ! LED's are very good now, you can get stupid bright ones but they will burn a few watts. Are we talking you want it lit like a stadium, full brightness like you are having a night party with friends and want people to see each other pretty well, or just a gentle lighting so you can see the sidewalk and where the bushes are sticking out at so you can make it into the house?How many bulbs of what wattage (either actual watts used or their incandescent equivalent) are you needing to adequately light the area in question?
might be better off with a microphone, if it's screeching and screaming, it's probably the catAbsolutely no clue. Just something that let's me see if that mass running away is my cat or a racoon
In Your case, Id do micro inverters. You convert the DC into AC right at the panel, and then send AC back to the house / barn etc. 500 feet is a fairly long way, but 10 Amp of 240 volt AC you could probably get away with 12 or 10 gauge wire. as an example, where DC you'd need probably 2 gauge or start into the aught sizes to lessen the horrible drop.Really wanna be here too. Michigan averages 160 days of sunny/partly sunny per year.
Aaron, is that enough? While we'd LOVE to be totally off grid, I don't know if we can do it. One question we keep bumping up against, how far away can collector panels be from the house? We have a nice open area that is probably 500 feet (or more? maybe?) from the house. It's an open field.
Another possibility is the roof of a pole barn, but it's about 3x as far away.
Sally. that is a great question . EVERYTHING is doable with enough collection and storage areas. Also, how much power do you need? If you are running a fridge, a fan, and a small light in a cabin, and heating water / house etc with wood / gas / etc, then yes it might work. But if you are wanting internet, water heater, garage door opener, wifi, etc etc. then the power requirements go way up. You also need to factor in, like in florida here, ok so we have a week of rain coming up. thanks god..... do you have the batteries to hold a weeks worth of crappy production / cover for??? if you burn 10 kw a day you'd need 50 kw of batteries, lets say 55 to be safe. ok, how fast do you want to replenish this? a day, 5 days? I always say to go MORE generation than your numbers say, it's always better to have a little more and the panel curtails, then the breaker turning off because your battery volts are critically low.Really wanna be here too. Michigan averages 160 days of sunny/partly sunny per year.
Aaron, is that enough? While we'd LOVE to be totally off grid, I don't know if we can do it.
Be VERY wary of unsolicited mail companies. Most are shady.Does anyone have experience with unsolicited mail solicitations for solar panel installation? Do they keep you hooked into the grid?