Hello, I just recently joined this forum and have been doing some research into Lithium Phosphate batteries for solar energy storage and home production which is interesting and from what I gather still not very ready except for a few custom builds. My question is regarding the A123 batteries that are used in the Aptera's 20kwh battery pack. I picked the Aptera because of it's aerodynamic nature and low weight, and am thinking it would be one of the electric cars that would require the fewest solar battery needs, yet could possibly be one of the first manageable cars to be powered under a moderate amount of solar panels.This is all just speculation.
I was thinking of asking this in that electric car forum mentioned here, but wasn't sure if solar is a sub-topic. Nonetheless, I might check there to ask questions about the BMS that can be quite challenging. So, has anyone tried to recharge an Aptera or other electric car using an all-solar panel setup? If I commuted every day with an an Aptera 20 miles (10 miles each way) and, assuming it has at least an 80 mile range, would it lose about 5kwh a day, and if I had a 10kwh solar setup just for charging the car (or having a larger one) and on the yearly minimum I got about 5kwh a day, would it be enough to recharge from 75% to 100% (15kwh back up to 20kwh) overnight so the car battery doesn't deplete over the week? I think this would require 2 battery setups, one for collecting solar energy during the day (since the car might not be at home during the weekday, but rather, at an office), and then when the car comes home, the home batteries could transfer DC-DC or use an inverter inefficiently to charge the Aptera's internal batteries overnight from storage. I don't prefer to swap them, as that would be inconvenient as it's not designed that way. I'm kind of fascinated by the thought that solar could replace the gasoline, electric, and heat too. Another car I was considering was the Zap Xebra electric, but it doesn't seem as rangeful as the Aptera.
I was thinking of asking this in that electric car forum mentioned here, but wasn't sure if solar is a sub-topic. Nonetheless, I might check there to ask questions about the BMS that can be quite challenging. So, has anyone tried to recharge an Aptera or other electric car using an all-solar panel setup? If I commuted every day with an an Aptera 20 miles (10 miles each way) and, assuming it has at least an 80 mile range, would it lose about 5kwh a day, and if I had a 10kwh solar setup just for charging the car (or having a larger one) and on the yearly minimum I got about 5kwh a day, would it be enough to recharge from 75% to 100% (15kwh back up to 20kwh) overnight so the car battery doesn't deplete over the week? I think this would require 2 battery setups, one for collecting solar energy during the day (since the car might not be at home during the weekday, but rather, at an office), and then when the car comes home, the home batteries could transfer DC-DC or use an inverter inefficiently to charge the Aptera's internal batteries overnight from storage. I don't prefer to swap them, as that would be inconvenient as it's not designed that way. I'm kind of fascinated by the thought that solar could replace the gasoline, electric, and heat too. Another car I was considering was the Zap Xebra electric, but it doesn't seem as rangeful as the Aptera.
Comment