Hello,
I’m david. Live in the north Georgia mountains. Latitude is about 34.5. I have about an acre and a half on a small river and I am starting to work toward independence. The ENTIRE basis for wanting to do this is in the event of grid meltdown / societal meltdown, which could go months or a year. I think it is just a matter of when personally. So all of this is based around designing a system that does the emergency basics I outline – and lasts as long as possible for the least investment.
I’m thinking about starting with 500 Gallons Propane. It’s dirt cheap now, can run my little Duromax FlexFuel Generator (4400 Surge / 3500 Consistent Watts). At 50% load it says it will run 20 hours on a barbecue tank. If we call a Barbeque tank 4.6 Gallons of LP, then they are basically claiming around 4.38 hours runtime at ½ load per gallon. I’m not buying that, and am calculating maybe 2.5 hours/gallon at ½ load (or 1750 watts/hr). That may even be pushing it. But at 3 hours of run a day I get maybe 10 months runtime for the following….
I WANT TO FOCUS ON a freezer, a fridge (about 700W each) some circulation fans and a Dehumidifier (?) as the main things that may need running. Cooking would be handled from a stack of smaller BBQ Bottles (not the 500 tank). I’m thinking about a portable LPG camp water heater, either off the 500 – or a few smaller tanks. One of my philosophies is that IF things really get that bad – there ain’t going to be many daily showers. And the power is only needed a few hours a day if that to keep the basics going / house from turning into mold etc. And I’ll have Solar Heat Collectors for “Base Heat” in winter that can be spot augmented by my “Big Buddy’s” that can be hooked to the 500, or individual bbq tanks.
Now, that’s my starting plan. Next phase is to extend the finite running life of the system with solar. And then I get stuck on all the dang batteries, inverters etc. What I want to do is actually bypass batteries altogether on a solar install. Propane is ultimately finite. So are batteries. If I consider that I only want the bare bones basics of refrigeration and dehumidification, and save the bulk of the propane energy for spot use to augment for splurges or cloudy days, then I could probably just hook solar direct to all my stuff and simply take advantage of it when the sun shines???? Should keep ahead of the humidity and keeping things from thawing most of the time with limited generator help. And of course – there would be some excess power in the system when sun is shining or generator running, and then we live like kings! With led lights blazing in a few lamps, and maybe we microwave some of our homegrown popcorn
LOL If lucky we run the little AC unit an hour or two sometimes 
I have very finite money. My questions are simple….. I guess I need some sort of inverter, but do I really need Sine/ Modified Sine / True Sine? Assuming a max solar wattage of say 1.5kw coming in at any given time – direct to use, skipping batteries, what is the cheapest way to work this? What drawbacks are seen? Keep in mind that I am pretty much content living on the grid. It’s cheap and easy. While nice to recoup investment as I plow along, the real and pretty much only reason for this is as an emergency energy insurance plan. If that turns out to be a couple week blizzard – the neighbors think I am a genius for a time. If nothing ever happens, know one really knows I’m paranoid nuts but you guys here
But if something does go wrong, and I think it will – my family genes are better prepared to survive and keep filling up the earth with humans. Hopefully a better batch than we currently have.
So…. Any feedback on how to accomplish my approach in most economic, longest lasting closed system manner? And again, in MY scenario – things may go out and stay out – for a LONG time, and I prefer to focus on maximizing the time I have the basics, than luxury aspects (like daily hot showers). Going to miss those
What I am looking for is basically a suggested "Parts List". And trust me - I have already researched so many possibilities I am exhausted. Finally figured I would direct ask someone. Thanks in advance for any thoughts.
Peace,
- david
I’m david. Live in the north Georgia mountains. Latitude is about 34.5. I have about an acre and a half on a small river and I am starting to work toward independence. The ENTIRE basis for wanting to do this is in the event of grid meltdown / societal meltdown, which could go months or a year. I think it is just a matter of when personally. So all of this is based around designing a system that does the emergency basics I outline – and lasts as long as possible for the least investment.
I’m thinking about starting with 500 Gallons Propane. It’s dirt cheap now, can run my little Duromax FlexFuel Generator (4400 Surge / 3500 Consistent Watts). At 50% load it says it will run 20 hours on a barbecue tank. If we call a Barbeque tank 4.6 Gallons of LP, then they are basically claiming around 4.38 hours runtime at ½ load per gallon. I’m not buying that, and am calculating maybe 2.5 hours/gallon at ½ load (or 1750 watts/hr). That may even be pushing it. But at 3 hours of run a day I get maybe 10 months runtime for the following….
I WANT TO FOCUS ON a freezer, a fridge (about 700W each) some circulation fans and a Dehumidifier (?) as the main things that may need running. Cooking would be handled from a stack of smaller BBQ Bottles (not the 500 tank). I’m thinking about a portable LPG camp water heater, either off the 500 – or a few smaller tanks. One of my philosophies is that IF things really get that bad – there ain’t going to be many daily showers. And the power is only needed a few hours a day if that to keep the basics going / house from turning into mold etc. And I’ll have Solar Heat Collectors for “Base Heat” in winter that can be spot augmented by my “Big Buddy’s” that can be hooked to the 500, or individual bbq tanks.
Now, that’s my starting plan. Next phase is to extend the finite running life of the system with solar. And then I get stuck on all the dang batteries, inverters etc. What I want to do is actually bypass batteries altogether on a solar install. Propane is ultimately finite. So are batteries. If I consider that I only want the bare bones basics of refrigeration and dehumidification, and save the bulk of the propane energy for spot use to augment for splurges or cloudy days, then I could probably just hook solar direct to all my stuff and simply take advantage of it when the sun shines???? Should keep ahead of the humidity and keeping things from thawing most of the time with limited generator help. And of course – there would be some excess power in the system when sun is shining or generator running, and then we live like kings! With led lights blazing in a few lamps, and maybe we microwave some of our homegrown popcorn


I have very finite money. My questions are simple….. I guess I need some sort of inverter, but do I really need Sine/ Modified Sine / True Sine? Assuming a max solar wattage of say 1.5kw coming in at any given time – direct to use, skipping batteries, what is the cheapest way to work this? What drawbacks are seen? Keep in mind that I am pretty much content living on the grid. It’s cheap and easy. While nice to recoup investment as I plow along, the real and pretty much only reason for this is as an emergency energy insurance plan. If that turns out to be a couple week blizzard – the neighbors think I am a genius for a time. If nothing ever happens, know one really knows I’m paranoid nuts but you guys here

So…. Any feedback on how to accomplish my approach in most economic, longest lasting closed system manner? And again, in MY scenario – things may go out and stay out – for a LONG time, and I prefer to focus on maximizing the time I have the basics, than luxury aspects (like daily hot showers). Going to miss those

What I am looking for is basically a suggested "Parts List". And trust me - I have already researched so many possibilities I am exhausted. Finally figured I would direct ask someone. Thanks in advance for any thoughts.
Peace,
- david
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