Solar Panel

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Sumner
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Re: Solar Panel

Post by Sumner »

richandlori wrote:As a full time live-a-board cruiser for two years now, let me offer up my thoughts on Solar Panels and the "dream" of actually running your boat off of them. At this point in the Solar Cost/Amp equation, solar simply doesn't compute as a solution for power. .......... Heck, but then my beer would be HOT!

Rich
SV THIRD DAY
Currently Floating in San Blas, Nayarit Mexico
Rich good observations, but I think one's electrical needs/wants would be higher if they are a full time live-a-board. I don't want to live at home like we do on the boat, so our needs are a lot higher there.

Now saying that I think that for trips of a week or so or in our case of a month or more you can supply "most" of your electrical needs via solar on a Mac at a resonable cost. We have an S, so we have even less room to put things than on an X or M, but I'm in the process of mounting 180 watts worth of panels. I firmly believe that will take care of over 90% of our needs most of the time. The rest of the time we will rely on the 12 volt gas engine driven charger....

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http://purplesagetradingpost.com/sumner ... de-13.html

Solar isn't as expensive now for our needs. We will have about $570 in the panels and a little over $200 for a good MPPT controller and some wire. I have about $400 in the generator I built, so a total of say $1200.

After I added the 40 watt panel we only had to run the generator on the average of about 15 minutes a day. I use a CPAP machine at night that uses about 36-42 amp hours a day. Without that the 40 watt would run the boat, but there again we are not full time live-a-boards. We have added an EdgeStar frig. and some of the guys seem to be getting by with about 65 watt panels to stay up with the frig. I'm hoping, yes hoping, that the 80 we are adding will handle the frig, and the 60 we are also now adding along with the 40 we had will take care of my CPAP machine and the computer/chartplotter, TV and GPS/fishfinder. I think on good sun days we will be fine and we have the generator to fall back on.

Since all of us have different needs/wants I think it is hard for any of us to predict what will work for someone else. If we were in your situation I'm sure we would want more than what we have now.

After we run the new setup for a while I'll be reporting on if it lived up to our expectations or not.

c ya and it sounds like you have a good life,

Sum

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KayakDan
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Re: Solar Panel

Post by KayakDan »

We are in the process of preparing our boat for winter in the Bahamas. We have changed over to all LED's andwe will be using an Edgestar FP430 fridge. After plugging in the numbers for electric usage on our boat,it looks like 130W of solar, in the Bahamas,would be more than adequate. Since we will be at anchor much of the time,chartplotter and VHF won't be pulling power. Stereo might run an hour or two a day,and lights(LED) for an hour or two. Laptop will be used ,maybe every few days (12v adapter,not inverter), for a DVD and occasional internet use.No microwave-no coffee pot. This added up to less than the power generated by 2-65 watt panels for 6-7 hours a day,which seems reasonable for the location.Am I missing something?
Keep in mind that we are very energy conscious,and we have routinely had $20-25 electric bills
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Sumner
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Re: Solar Panel

Post by Sumner »

KayakDan wrote:We are in the process of preparing our boat for winter in the Bahamas..........Am I missing something?......
I'll bet you make it on that if you have sun :) . How many hours total of sunlight is there the time of the year you will be there? From that you should be able to figure out about how many 'good hours of sun' you will get. Are you going to run this combination over the summer? That for sure will tell you a lot.

We have a stereo and they don't draw much, but Ruth's daughter gave her an ipod for her birthday and we bought these....

Image

http://purplesagetradingpost.com/sumner ... ll-09.html

....little speakers that run for 3-4 days on some AA or AAA batteries. The speakers are small but have surprisingly good sound out in the cockpit and better in the cabin. Cost? $20.00.

We didn't know if we would like the ipod, but we are now sold on them, so we bought a second one, the classic, which has 160 megs of storage. Now we have all of our CD's, Tapes, Phono records, and hours off of Sirius on it and haven't put much of a dent in the storage. We also bought a........

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http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss? ... +&x=7&y=19

...... larger unit with larger speakers that we use in the bedroom at home and it runs on AC or batteries for a long time. We really like it and will take it on the boat also and run it off batteries. You probably already have a really nice stereo setup with nice speakers, but for someone that doesn't these might be an alternative to the stereo. The other nice thing is we can play them in the boat or at home and play the I-pod over the vehicle radio while traveling. BTW I'm not a Mac guy, that is Mac as in computer 8) .

c ya and have a great trip,

Sum

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