Hey guys,
I've been lurking around here for a few days checking out some of the stickies, but I figured I' d go ahead and get some general advice on my situation before I start running numbers.
I am building a chicken tractor (basically a portable chicken coop that you move around your yard) for a few egg laying chickens. Chickens lay best when they have more daylight hours. To keep egg production up, you can trick the chickens by providing them a light in the coop (especially during the winter months.) You shoot for a 14 hour day. So if you have an 8 hour day, you run a light on a timer for about 3 hours before dawn and 3 hours after dusk. I want to avoid running it off an extension cord if possible, just to avoid the hassle of having to move it around all of the time and to eliminate the chances of having to replace my wife's poodle should he decide that he just can't resist taking a bite out of that bright orange menace.
Not being very solar savvy, I thought it would be pretty simple to power a light bulb. Boy did I open a can of worms, haha.
My original thought process was use a standard 120V LED light (about a 60 watt incandescent equivalent) which draws 9 watts. But then you have to power an inverter (lose energy) and a timer (lose more energy). Now I'm not even sure if I need to go AC or just try to run the whole thing DC. The major drawback to DC seems to be that timers are significantly more expensive than AC timers. But if I can eliminate the need for an inverter maybe it would be a wash.
Any wisdom or advice is greatly appreciated, because at this point, I really don't know where to start.
Thanks,
-cmc
I've been lurking around here for a few days checking out some of the stickies, but I figured I' d go ahead and get some general advice on my situation before I start running numbers.
I am building a chicken tractor (basically a portable chicken coop that you move around your yard) for a few egg laying chickens. Chickens lay best when they have more daylight hours. To keep egg production up, you can trick the chickens by providing them a light in the coop (especially during the winter months.) You shoot for a 14 hour day. So if you have an 8 hour day, you run a light on a timer for about 3 hours before dawn and 3 hours after dusk. I want to avoid running it off an extension cord if possible, just to avoid the hassle of having to move it around all of the time and to eliminate the chances of having to replace my wife's poodle should he decide that he just can't resist taking a bite out of that bright orange menace.
Not being very solar savvy, I thought it would be pretty simple to power a light bulb. Boy did I open a can of worms, haha.
My original thought process was use a standard 120V LED light (about a 60 watt incandescent equivalent) which draws 9 watts. But then you have to power an inverter (lose energy) and a timer (lose more energy). Now I'm not even sure if I need to go AC or just try to run the whole thing DC. The major drawback to DC seems to be that timers are significantly more expensive than AC timers. But if I can eliminate the need for an inverter maybe it would be a wash.
Any wisdom or advice is greatly appreciated, because at this point, I really don't know where to start.
Thanks,
-cmc
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