Harbor Freight Briefcase Solar Panel

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  • peterb77
    Junior Member
    • Sep 2015
    • 1

    #1

    Harbor Freight Briefcase Solar Panel

    I was searching online for a portable solar panel kit that my family and I could use to charge some of our basic electronics (think Cell phones, GPS, flashlight batteries) when we go camping. I found the Harbor Freight Briefcase Solar Panel and the price seemed right. I was wondering if I actually needed a charge controller or if I could just plug in a USB adapter in the female cigarette adapter and use that to charge some of my portable battery packs. I would use the battery packs to charge my devices. Any concerns with this setup? I am not very familiar with solar power...or any kind of electrical power for that matter. Is their another set up or kit that people know of that may be both economical and applicable to my scenario?

    Here is the link to the item:

  • SunEagle
    Super Moderator
    • Oct 2012
    • 15161

    #2
    Originally posted by peterb77
    I was searching online for a portable solar panel kit that my family and I could use to charge some of our basic electronics (think Cell phones, GPS, flashlight batteries) when we go camping. I found the Harbor Freight Briefcase Solar Panel and the price seemed right. I was wondering if I actually needed a charge controller or if I could just plug in a USB adapter in the female cigarette adapter and use that to charge some of my portable battery packs. I would use the battery packs to charge my devices. Any concerns with this setup? I am not very familiar with solar power...or any kind of electrical power for that matter. Is their another set up or kit that people know of that may be both economical and applicable to my scenario?

    Here is the link to the item:

    http://www.harborfreight.com/13-watt...ger-68750.html
    I am not sure that 13watt solar panel will provide much of any type of charging for your electronics. There are larger wattage portable "briefcase" solar panels that come with charge controllers so you would still need a battery and inverter for AC loads.

    I put this system together for about $550. It has an 80watt panel, 65Ah battery, 200watt inverter, a HF hand cart and battery box. It can provide about 200 watt hours a day.
    Attached Files

    Comment

    • paul65k
      Solar Fanatic
      • Aug 2015
      • 116

      #3
      Originally posted by peterb77
      I was searching online for a portable solar panel kit that my family and I could use to charge some of our basic electronics (think Cell phones, GPS, flashlight batteries) when we go camping. I found the Harbor Freight Briefcase Solar Panel and the price seemed right. I was wondering if I actually needed a charge controller or if I could just plug in a USB adapter in the female cigarette adapter and use that to charge some of my portable battery packs. I would use the battery packs to charge my devices. Any concerns with this setup? I am not very familiar with solar power...or any kind of electrical power for that matter. Is their another set up or kit that people know of that may be both economical and applicable to my scenario?Here is the link to the item:http://www.harborfreight.com/13-watt...ger-68750.html
      Quick Question??................Did you even read the freakin' reviews about this item on the HF website???Here is the VERY FIRST review posted on the website;

      Comments about THUNDERBOLT MAGNUM SOLAR 13 Watt Briefcase Solar Charger:This item requires a "charger controller" It would be better to show one and indicate that it's not included, but required & that it's sold separately. That would be more helpful that showing a drill (that's not included).Maybe even offer a packaged deal with an appropriate sized controller and a solar panel kit

      Comment

      • SunEagle
        Super Moderator
        • Oct 2012
        • 15161

        #4
        Originally posted by paul65k
        Quick Question??................Did you even read the freakin' reviews about this item on the HF website???Here is the VERY FIRST review posted on the website;

        Comments about THUNDERBOLT MAGNUM SOLAR 13 Watt Briefcase Solar Charger:This item requires a "charger controller" It would be better to show one and indicate that it's not included, but required & that it's sold separately. That would be more helpful that showing a drill (that's not included).Maybe even offer a packaged deal with an appropriate sized controller and a solar panel kit
        At 13 watts that panel is nothing more than a battery trickle charger which doesn't really need a charge controller because it won't be putting out that much in the way of charging amps.

        It probably could run a small wattage device on 12volts or even one of those 5v USB chargers that goes into a cigarette lighter plug. But it will certainly not get you much charging capacity even if you kept it pointed directly at the sun all day.

        Comment

        • PNjunction
          Solar Fanatic
          • Jul 2012
          • 2179

          #5
          Originally posted by peterb77
          I was searching online for a portable solar panel kit that my family and I could use to charge some of our basic electronics (think Cell phones, GPS, flashlight batteries) when we go camping.
          That HF kit is a waste of time for charging cellphones and gps - and lugging a lot of lead around for that chore. Far easier is to use a 5v usb Anker 14w panel and li-ion battery packs, like Anker Astro. Charges faster - less to carry around especially a small junk agm. This isn't the 70's anymore.

          I was wondering if I actually needed a charge controller or if I could just plug in a USB adapter in the female cigarette adapter and use that to charge some of my portable battery packs. I would use the battery packs to charge my devices. Any concerns with this setup?
          Yes you DO need a charge controller, *especially* with the smaller batteries that this thing usually gets attached to. But how about destroying LARGE expensive batteries? Without a controller, it does that too:



          Thing is, the non-controller advocates are banking on the fact that your big batteries are never really fully charged in the first place, so no harm happens. But when they ARE charged fully, even a 13 watt panel can KILL a good expensive bank! It really is DANGEROUS, but most people don't notice because their battery is either crap or never fully charged. While current is small, held long enough at high voltage you just eat up the positive plate by corroding it, and gas / vent it.

          Save your money until you've read more. In the meantime, do yourself a favor and grab an Anker 14w panel, along with any other usb-input li-ion battery gadget.

          For more extensive 12v gear, do more reading and less linking.

          Comment

          • Sunking
            Solar Fanatic
            • Feb 2010
            • 23301

            #6
            Harbor Firght is pure junk. A 13 watt panel is not even enough to charge cell phone. A good cell phone charger is 20 watts and that takes a day. Makes no difference iif it is Harbor Fright POS junk or top of the line, at 13 watts is about as much power as a good sized stinky Beer Fart.
            MSEE, PE

            Comment

            • PNjunction
              Solar Fanatic
              • Jul 2012
              • 2179

              #7
              Originally posted by Sunking
              13 watts is about as much power as a good sized stinky Beer Fart.
              I tried that and got an extra 10 minutes of runtime on my cellphone! Had to drink more beer to fully charge.

              While the wattage is the same whether you are 12v or 5v usb output, the current when using a 5v output ends up being about 2.6a, maybe 2.1a when you throw in loss from the 5v step-down output. That charges most of today's gadgets at a normal rate.

              At 12v charging a typical ups style agm, that equates to about 750ma (from 18v ocv), but still we are dealing with inefficient lead-acid charging as compared to going directly to a li-ion device.

              But yes, there is a lot of junk solar-toy stuff out there.

              Comment

              • Sunking
                Solar Fanatic
                • Feb 2010
                • 23301

                #8
                Originally posted by PNjunction
                I tried that and got an extra 10 minutes of runtime on my cellphone! Had to drink more beer to fully charge.
                You know what is really sad is post like this we get a dozen times a day tells us our education system is extremely poor. Adults today have no basic math and science skills. Our public education system is producing morons not even capable of balancing a check book. Explains why NoBama won. People cannot even figure out Watts x Hours = Watt Hours. That means if they make $10 per hour have no clue what they make if the work 10 hours. I live in Panama and Jr. Highschool students can figure out simple energy precautions. It is simple 6th grade math.
                MSEE, PE

                Comment

                • PNjunction
                  Solar Fanatic
                  • Jul 2012
                  • 2179

                  #9
                  Hang on there, turbo! I recognize caffeine overload when I see it. In the words of Cesar Millan, "tsschht".

                  Comment

                  • RatedPG
                    Member
                    • Aug 2015
                    • 71

                    #10
                    Originally posted by SunEagle
                    I put this system together for about $550.
                    SunEagle, how long ago did you put this together? Care to share the details of each component?

                    If you've posted the details on this forum, please give me the link.

                    Comment

                    • Mike90250
                      Moderator
                      • May 2009
                      • 16020

                      #11
                      Originally posted by RatedPG
                      SunEagle, how long ago did you put this together? Care to share the details of each component?

                      If you've posted the details on this forum, please give me the link.
                      Here's the version I did with a 60W flexible PV panel to withstand the rigors of Burning Man, heavy but effective, I call it simply the Monolith
                      60W PV , C12 PWM controller , some fuse blocks , 300w pure sine inverter, space for 2 batteries - Group size 27

                      http://ae-zone.org/2009/09/mikes-mon...solar-systems/Mono_2005_CS_056.JPG

                      Powerfab top of pole PV mount (2) | Listeroid 6/1 w/st5 gen head | XW6048 inverter/chgr | Iota 48V/15A charger | Morningstar 60A MPPT | 48V, 800A NiFe Battery (in series)| 15, Evergreen 205w "12V" PV array on pole | Midnight ePanel | Grundfos 10 SO5-9 with 3 wire Franklin Electric motor (1/2hp 240V 1ph ) on a timer for 3 hr noontime run - Runs off PV ||
                      || Midnight Classic 200 | 10, Evergreen 200w in a 160VOC array ||
                      || VEC1093 12V Charger | Maha C401 aa/aaa Charger | SureSine | Sunsaver MPPT 15A

                      solar: http://tinyurl.com/LMR-Solar
                      gen: http://tinyurl.com/LMR-Lister

                      Comment

                      • SunEagle
                        Super Moderator
                        • Oct 2012
                        • 15161

                        #12
                        Originally posted by RatedPG
                        SunEagle, how long ago did you put this together? Care to share the details of each component?

                        If you've posted the details on this forum, please give me the link.
                        I may have posted them somewhere but here is the list of components. Most items were purchased from Amazon or eBay. I built this about 2 years ago.

                        80 watt folding solar panel including 10amp pwm charge controller and cabling. ~$250
                        12volt 65Ah Optima Blue Top battery. ~ $180
                        A Marine Battery Box that can accept a Group 24 or 27 battery ~ $35
                        Collapsing hand cart dolly ~ $40
                        2 x Orange storage hooks from HD ~ $6/ea
                        Cheap 250 watt inverter ~ $30
                        Grand total cost plus some blood sweat and tears ~ $550

                        First off I spent way too much on that 80 watt folding panel and I should have gotten at least a 100 watt for that 65Ah battery. So do the research and be picky on what you get.

                        I sized the system based on using if when I was out in the wilds so I could recharge my RC plane batteries. It now serves as my CPAP machine emergency power source if the grid goes down over night.

                        The battery is not light but with the hand cart and bungee cord I can role it a long way from the car with out too much trouble so IMO it is somewhat portable but not something for back packing.

                        Comment

                        • paul65k
                          Solar Fanatic
                          • Aug 2015
                          • 116

                          #13
                          Originally posted by Sunking
                          You know what is really sad is post like this we get a dozen times a day tells us our education system is extremely poor. Adults today have no basic math and science skills. Our public education system is producing morons not even capable of balancing a check book. Explains why NoBama won. People cannot even figure out Watts x Hours = Watt Hours. That means if they make $10 per hour have no clue what they make if the work 10 hours. I live in Panama and Jr. Highschool students can figure out simple energy precautions. It is simple 6th grade math.
                          So.......Maybe Congress can raise the "Minimum Output".............lol

                          Comment

                          • lkruper
                            Solar Fanatic
                            • May 2015
                            • 892

                            #14
                            Originally posted by SunEagle
                            I may have posted them somewhere but here is the list of components. Most items were purchased from Amazon or eBay. I built this about 2 years ago.

                            80 watt folding solar panel including 10amp pwm charge controller and cabling. ~$250
                            12volt 65Ah Optima Blue Top battery. ~ $180
                            A Marine Battery Box that can accept a Group 24 or 27 battery ~ $35
                            Collapsing hand cart dolly ~ $40
                            2 x Orange storage hooks from HD ~ $6/ea
                            Cheap 250 watt inverter ~ $30
                            Grand total cost plus some blood sweat and tears ~ $550

                            First off I spent way too much on that 80 watt folding panel and I should have gotten at least a 100 watt for that 65Ah battery. So do the research and be picky on what you get.

                            I sized the system based on using if when I was out in the wilds so I could recharge my RC plane batteries. It now serves as my CPAP machine emergency power source if the grid goes down over night.

                            The battery is not light but with the hand cart and bungee cord I can role it a long way from the car with out too much trouble so IMO it is somewhat portable but not something for back packing.
                            I am starting to spec out a system to give me minimal coverage at night at my grid-connected cabin if the power goes out and I don't want to listen to my generator. I found out the local Costco where I have a membership has 27DC Interstate 12v 120AH for $78.99 + $15 core. Amazon has a NOCO battery box for $18.21. I have an auto charger 2/6/12 amps to use for now and a NOCO 3.5 amp for maintenance. A Cotek S150w PSW is $139. So for $333 + wires, fuses, etc I can get my feet wet. What do you (or anyone else) know about the Costco Interstate batteries?

                            My second option is to take two of these batteries in series and the Cotek 24v PSW at the same price with a cheap golf cart charger (12/24/36/48) for $99.

                            But my plans change daily as I read more.

                            Comment

                            • SunEagle
                              Super Moderator
                              • Oct 2012
                              • 15161

                              #15
                              Originally posted by lkruper
                              I am starting to spec out a system to give me minimal coverage at night at my grid-connected cabin if the power goes out and I don't want to listen to my generator. I found out the local Costco where I have a membership has 27DC Interstate 12v 120AH for $78.99 + $15 core. Amazon has a NOCO battery box for $18.21. I have an auto charger 2/6/12 amps to use for now and a NOCO 3.5 amp for maintenance. A Cotek S150w PSW is $139. So for $333 + wires, fuses, etc I can get my feet wet. What do you (or anyone else) know about the Costco Interstate batteries?

                              My second option is to take two of these batteries in series and the Cotek 24v PSW at the same price with a cheap golf cart charger (12/24/36/48) for $99.

                              But my plans change daily as I read more.
                              I would say those batteries will probably be ok for your first set to "test and burn". They are probably not really deep cycle so will not last as long as some of the better FLA batteries.

                              Your last statement is what gets most people in trouble. If you purchase the hardware first and then determine what you true daily watt hour load later, like most people do, they end up getting rid of what they got and starting from scratch because their batteries are too small or they have gotten the wrong Charge controller and solar panel type.

                              Keep in mind that having your system just sitting there waiting for the grid to go down might be ok but the batteries will start to die even if you just keep them on a trickle charge.

                              If it was me I would invest in a quiet inverter type generator which would provide 1800 watt of power and pretty much sip gas the few times I would need it.

                              Comment

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