Howdy from central Virginia.
My wife, kid, and I are taking to the woods in a 30' yurt and we need some help figuring out our energy design.
My main question is what size solar system you think we can get away with on a budget, although here is the whole scenario:
We have good sun exposure from 10am until 2pm, roughly. More in the summer.
The sunny spot is 130' from our yurt site. Would you ideally run 24V DC line to house, then have all the gadgets and battery bank?
-I have a grasp on our water collection situation, but it requires some electricity for the pump from the below ground cistern. There is a hill behind us, but I'm planning on putting the cistern right near the yurt because that's our collection surface. So the pump will be 3 feet in the ground in the cistern and pumping water to a propane on-demand water heater, through some filters, and to a sink and low flow shower/bath. The rise is about 4 feet to yurt deck, plus some more to faucet height. The heater requires around 30 PSI. I'm thinking it will be a 3-4 gpm DC pump, but still researching and open to insight.
-The other big electric need is refrigeration. We are doing a chester freezer to DC fridge conversion for under 200 dollars (google it if interested, several sites with instructions). This little guy should only use about .2-.3 KWH per 24 hrs.
-A fan for circulation would be ideal. Any recommendations on efficient fans? The yurt is 700 sq ft and round. 14.5' in center, so heat gets lost up top and needs recirculation in winter and needs to be pumped out of the dome vent in summer. 2 computer fans enough?
-Charging/running 2 iphones, 3 headlamps, 1 macbook, occasional inkjet printing
-2 or 3 LED lights... if that is best option.
Would this system fit the bill?
Because it fits my budget!
Or would I have endless maintenance and be replacing parts in a few years?
Should I stay away from kits? I like the DIY aspect and the less 'figuring' part.
It would be great if the system was expandable, for in the future when we want MORE! However, if this effects overall cost too much, we may just keep it simple.
I'd say my budget is $5000, but I'd like to be under. Is this possible?
Thanks for any help! It's much appreciated.
Ben
My wife, kid, and I are taking to the woods in a 30' yurt and we need some help figuring out our energy design.
My main question is what size solar system you think we can get away with on a budget, although here is the whole scenario:
We have good sun exposure from 10am until 2pm, roughly. More in the summer.
The sunny spot is 130' from our yurt site. Would you ideally run 24V DC line to house, then have all the gadgets and battery bank?
-I have a grasp on our water collection situation, but it requires some electricity for the pump from the below ground cistern. There is a hill behind us, but I'm planning on putting the cistern right near the yurt because that's our collection surface. So the pump will be 3 feet in the ground in the cistern and pumping water to a propane on-demand water heater, through some filters, and to a sink and low flow shower/bath. The rise is about 4 feet to yurt deck, plus some more to faucet height. The heater requires around 30 PSI. I'm thinking it will be a 3-4 gpm DC pump, but still researching and open to insight.
-The other big electric need is refrigeration. We are doing a chester freezer to DC fridge conversion for under 200 dollars (google it if interested, several sites with instructions). This little guy should only use about .2-.3 KWH per 24 hrs.
-A fan for circulation would be ideal. Any recommendations on efficient fans? The yurt is 700 sq ft and round. 14.5' in center, so heat gets lost up top and needs recirculation in winter and needs to be pumped out of the dome vent in summer. 2 computer fans enough?
-Charging/running 2 iphones, 3 headlamps, 1 macbook, occasional inkjet printing
-2 or 3 LED lights... if that is best option.
Would this system fit the bill?
Because it fits my budget!
Or would I have endless maintenance and be replacing parts in a few years?
Should I stay away from kits? I like the DIY aspect and the less 'figuring' part.
It would be great if the system was expandable, for in the future when we want MORE! However, if this effects overall cost too much, we may just keep it simple.
I'd say my budget is $5000, but I'd like to be under. Is this possible?
Thanks for any help! It's much appreciated.
Ben
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