My entire house is LED. I want to use a 12v system.. Seems to be the most practical and cost effective.
I wanted to run each circuit on its own panels, MPPT controller, batteries and inverter.
I want to be able to run the circuit during the day and any extra power left to charge the batteries for night use.
Looking at a 40 amp MPPT controller , 6 x 250 watt panels in parallel, Full sine wave 1500watt continuous 3000 peak dc/ac inverter. 4 x 110a/h batteries in parallel. I want to do at least 1 circuit per..
Double this for a 220 circuit.
A 15 amp circuit has the maximum power output of 1725 watts. 20 Amp is 2300 watts. Rule of thumb is to never go more that 75% of max, so that's 1300 watts and 1725 watts respectfully.
I'm not aware of what each circuit does in terms of load, but I think I may have it covered..
6 x 250 watt panels = 1500 watts - (20% loss) = 1200 watts (usable)
If the demand is not that high, then I'm good. Some circuits will use less panels.. Such as my office lights.. I have 13 high-hats on a dedicated circuit. Did this before I went LED. The total draw is only 13 x 10.5 watts. So, 136.5 watts total but with a light output of 845 watts.. @ 2700k. A single 250 watt panel and 1 110 a/h battery and a 500 watt inverter will be used for that..
I'm confused on why 12v systems are not more mainstreamed. I've seen many successful 12v DIY off grid solutions that work awesome.
Joey
I wanted to run each circuit on its own panels, MPPT controller, batteries and inverter.
I want to be able to run the circuit during the day and any extra power left to charge the batteries for night use.
Looking at a 40 amp MPPT controller , 6 x 250 watt panels in parallel, Full sine wave 1500watt continuous 3000 peak dc/ac inverter. 4 x 110a/h batteries in parallel. I want to do at least 1 circuit per..
Double this for a 220 circuit.
A 15 amp circuit has the maximum power output of 1725 watts. 20 Amp is 2300 watts. Rule of thumb is to never go more that 75% of max, so that's 1300 watts and 1725 watts respectfully.
I'm not aware of what each circuit does in terms of load, but I think I may have it covered..
6 x 250 watt panels = 1500 watts - (20% loss) = 1200 watts (usable)
If the demand is not that high, then I'm good. Some circuits will use less panels.. Such as my office lights.. I have 13 high-hats on a dedicated circuit. Did this before I went LED. The total draw is only 13 x 10.5 watts. So, 136.5 watts total but with a light output of 845 watts.. @ 2700k. A single 250 watt panel and 1 110 a/h battery and a 500 watt inverter will be used for that..
I'm confused on why 12v systems are not more mainstreamed. I've seen many successful 12v DIY off grid solutions that work awesome.
Joey
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