The Keep It Simple Stupid principle.
When I decided to put a solar system on my RV I contacted a dealer in AZ who specialized in RV solar. Having been to Camping World and other venues I expected to not only have to buy the panels but all the other gizmos that they sell. Believe it or not this guy was a honest man. He sold me a 130 Watt panel and that was it. He instructed me to take an extension cord cut it off 3 foot from the female end and attach that one to the batteries (two 12 volt, 100 ah, marine in parallel) and the other end to the panel. That way I could move the panel where ever I wanted when camping and I would just have to plug it in to the batteries. When I inquired about a controller etc. he said that if you kept it under 150 watts none was needed. He was right. Going on my 5th year of almost fulltime RVing and have never run out of juice or replaced the batteries. I use the generator for about 5 minutes to fire up the Micro wave and that is it. The RV had LED lights, my computer and 24" monitor are very low wattage and I have unlimited data plan with Verizon.
My point is that I've seen so many complicate systems with people spending hundreds if not thousands of dollars on controllers and other possibly unnecessary gizmos that I believe are not needed if you keep each panel and battery system isolated and not centralized.
Here is my hair brained plan for a thousand square foot cabin in Wisconsin. Instead of a centralized battery bank with panels feeding into a controller or three I'm proposing to instead, follow the KISS method, I have used for both my boat and RV. Six 150 Watt panels each connected directly to two 12 volt batteries with each panel and batteries separate from each other. No controllers etc. needed. Put in an on/off switch for night time disconnect and that's it. Have mostly DC powered water heater, crock pot, coffee maker, refrigerator etc. Have a few AC outlets for backup and a few trickle chargers and a couple of 2000 watt inverters for odd situations and that's it.
Anticipated advantages: No loss of electricity due to inverters and shorter wire runs. Lower initial cost by cutting out the controllers etc. Mostly off grid and basic appliances usable if power goes out. Most of all it's a simple system that doesn't need an advanced degree in electronics to setup, fix, customize or understand.
Am I barking up the wrong tree here? Anyone see any obvious flaws or major problems? As I've said I have been doing this on my RV and boat for over 5 years without any problems. Have I just been lucky?
Thank you in advance.
Harry
When I decided to put a solar system on my RV I contacted a dealer in AZ who specialized in RV solar. Having been to Camping World and other venues I expected to not only have to buy the panels but all the other gizmos that they sell. Believe it or not this guy was a honest man. He sold me a 130 Watt panel and that was it. He instructed me to take an extension cord cut it off 3 foot from the female end and attach that one to the batteries (two 12 volt, 100 ah, marine in parallel) and the other end to the panel. That way I could move the panel where ever I wanted when camping and I would just have to plug it in to the batteries. When I inquired about a controller etc. he said that if you kept it under 150 watts none was needed. He was right. Going on my 5th year of almost fulltime RVing and have never run out of juice or replaced the batteries. I use the generator for about 5 minutes to fire up the Micro wave and that is it. The RV had LED lights, my computer and 24" monitor are very low wattage and I have unlimited data plan with Verizon.
My point is that I've seen so many complicate systems with people spending hundreds if not thousands of dollars on controllers and other possibly unnecessary gizmos that I believe are not needed if you keep each panel and battery system isolated and not centralized.
Here is my hair brained plan for a thousand square foot cabin in Wisconsin. Instead of a centralized battery bank with panels feeding into a controller or three I'm proposing to instead, follow the KISS method, I have used for both my boat and RV. Six 150 Watt panels each connected directly to two 12 volt batteries with each panel and batteries separate from each other. No controllers etc. needed. Put in an on/off switch for night time disconnect and that's it. Have mostly DC powered water heater, crock pot, coffee maker, refrigerator etc. Have a few AC outlets for backup and a few trickle chargers and a couple of 2000 watt inverters for odd situations and that's it.
Anticipated advantages: No loss of electricity due to inverters and shorter wire runs. Lower initial cost by cutting out the controllers etc. Mostly off grid and basic appliances usable if power goes out. Most of all it's a simple system that doesn't need an advanced degree in electronics to setup, fix, customize or understand.
Am I barking up the wrong tree here? Anyone see any obvious flaws or major problems? As I've said I have been doing this on my RV and boat for over 5 years without any problems. Have I just been lucky?
Thank you in advance.
Harry
Comment