Off Grid Truck Camper

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  • dkpro1
    replied
    yep

    One big ass RV. LOL

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  • SunEagle
    replied
    Originally posted by Sunking
    5 Kw of panels on a RV?
    It must be a ground mount system or a very very big RV.

    Leave a comment:


  • Sunking
    replied
    Originally posted by dkpro1
    I'm using grid tied for off grid working great on my rv... you know about MPTT....
    5 Kw of panels on a RV?

    Leave a comment:


  • dkpro1
    replied
    Sorry King

    Originally posted by Sunking
    No my pricing is spot on. You are talking Grid Tied, not Off-Grid battery.
    I'm using grid tied for off grid working great on my rv... you know about MPTT....

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  • Sunking
    replied
    Originally posted by dkpro1
    King you very knowledgeable Elc. but your priceing on panles is way off I can get 5kw. for $3000.00
    No my pricing is spot on. You are talking Grid Tied, not Off-Grid battery.

    Leave a comment:


  • dkpro1
    replied
    ???

    Originally posted by Sunking
    Well the refrigerator is the show stopper for solar stand alone on a truck camper shell. The Refer uses roughly 1 Kwh per day. Depending on location, time of year use, and orientation will require a 400 to 1000 watt solar panel and your truck camper shell is not large enough to hold that many panels. It will also require about a 300 pound 12 volt 400 AH battery if used on solar alone.

    However if the truck is driven or can idle about 1 hour per day you have no need for solar, just use a battery isolator with a pair of 6 volt golf cart batteries. Use the $3000 you save on solar panels and controller for something else.
    King you very knowledgeable Elc. but your priceing on panles is way off I can get 5kw. for $3000.00

    Leave a comment:


  • Mike90250
    replied
    Sounds like a job for a Honda EU1000, or any other small, quiet inverter generator, and a battery charger.

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  • Sunking
    replied
    Originally posted by Mikerodrig27
    Touching on using the truck's alternator to charge the batteries, I'm going to do that but don't want to depend on that day after day. My truck is a 98 Dodge Ram 2500 with a Cummins diesel. I'm going to be in a lot of northern climates where it is not good to let these engines idle for long as they will fall out of the operating temperature range.
    Alloow me to poke some holes in your logic.

    In northern climates where there are cold winters means you will have very poor solar insolation. Remember the 3 most important factors for off-grid solar is

    1. Location
    2. Location
    3. Location

    Did I mention location is important?

    For example let's say this camper is in Wisconsin and you need to generate 1 Kwh of power in winter. If it were even remotely possible to position you camper with clear view of the horizon to the East, South, and West, pointing the panels directly solar south at the precise tilt angle would require a minimum panel wattage 1000 watts. Realistically you cannot meet all those perfect conditions, more like 2000 to 3000 watts. Even at 1000 watts requires more room than your camper can accommodate.

    Take that same camper to Tuscon AZ in winter and all you need is a 250 watt panel to do the job in winter. Location matters.

    Have you considered using a RV/Camper refrigerator made to do what you want? They do not use electricity for the obvious reason. They use LPG. With LPG you get a refrigerator, heat, and cooking. No electricity required.

    Leave a comment:


  • Mikerodrig27
    replied
    Originally posted by Sunking
    Well the refrigerator is the show stopper for solar stand alone on a truck camper shell. The Refer uses roughly 1 Kwh per day. Depending on location, time of year use, and orientation will require a 400 to 1000 watt solar panel and your truck camper shell is not large enough to hold that many panels. It will also require about a 300 pound 12 volt 400 AH battery if used on solar alone.

    However if the truck is driven or can idle about 1 hour per day you have no need for solar, just use a battery isolator with a pair of 6 volt golf cart batteries. Use the $3000 you save on solar panels and controller for something else.
    That's a fair assessment. I appreciate the advise!

    I went ahead and returned that refrigerator. I'm looking into a lower powered DC refrigerator.



    This will make it so I won't have to purchase an expensive sine wave inverter and won't have as much power loss due to inverting the power.

    Now I just need to size up some solar panels and find some decent equipment. I can do all the wiring and already have all the connectors and tools for wires up to 2 awg.

    Touching on using the truck's alternator to charge the batteries, I'm going to do that but don't want to depend on that day after day. My truck is a 98 Dodge Ram 2500 with a Cummins diesel. I'm going to be in a lot of northern climates where it is not good to let these engines idle for long as they will fall out of the operating temperature range.

    Let me know your thoughts on the fridge.

    I also plan to purchase DC to DC power cords for the two laptops. I have a small 400w inverter that I will have on a switch and will only use it when I need it (rarely if ever).

    Leave a comment:


  • Sunking
    replied
    Well the refrigerator is the show stopper for solar stand alone on a truck camper shell. The Refer uses roughly 1 Kwh per day. Depending on location, time of year use, and orientation will require a 400 to 1000 watt solar panel and your truck camper shell is not large enough to hold that many panels. It will also require about a 300 pound 12 volt 400 AH battery if used on solar alone.

    However if the truck is driven or can idle about 1 hour per day you have no need for solar, just use a battery isolator with a pair of 6 volt golf cart batteries. Use the $3000 you save on solar panels and controller for something else.

    Leave a comment:


  • Mikerodrig27
    started a topic Off Grid Truck Camper

    Off Grid Truck Camper

    I need to get my first post in so I can see other people's photos and start my research!

    My wife and I are considering doing a solar setup for our truck camper project. I also plan on figuring out how to use the truck's alternator to help the solar panel along seeing as how we will be driving the truck alot.

    Things I need to be able to power:
    -Two laptops
    Asus Vivobook

    Acer Aspire 7750g


    -Small Refridgerator



    -Led lights (only some of the time)


    -Charge two phones and a small tablet

    My initial thoughts were to use two golf cart batteries, a strong solar panel, solar charge controller and a small inverter for the refrigerator. However, I think I'm off target a little bit.

    I'm looking through the forums but if you have any advice, I'll give you a dime for your to cents!
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