Hello, I am new to the forums! I come here in search of insight from some more experienced folks before I make my purchases. Any help or thoughts will be much appreciated!
Here's what I'm thinking:
I can reasonably spend only around 1000-2000 dollars right now - but I want solar power somewhere in my home.
I have several dedicated circuits ran and wired into my breaker box. The circuit I have in mind is a dedicated 4-plug AC wall outlet ran to my living room along side the rooms normal wiring - I've called it the 'clean' circuit. I did this for the home entertainment system, but it was never even installed so now I have a 15 amp breaker wired to a circuit essentially carrying no load.
What I want to do is disconnect the clean circuit from the mains and wire it, with the 15 amp breaker, into a 24V, 900-watt inverter (1800w Surge, or 15 amps at 120VAC). I think this means the breaker should trip if more than the maximum surge power of the inverter is demanded.
My solar array would be two 250-watt panels (perhaps up to 300-watt panels) wired into a a 30-amp MPPT charge controller. The garage roof is south, southwest facing at 55~ degrees with zero shadow cast potential year round.
The battery bank would consist of two 12v, 35Ah batteries (wired parrallel) and hooked to a third 12v, 135Ah battery in series giving me a 24V, 102Ah Bank in total.
I would like to find a way to use the 24V battery bank to charge my power tools lithium ion batteries (both 24V, 2Ah and 4Ah). I realize I could plug the AC powered charging docks that came with the appliance into the power inverter, but I'd like to keep the load off of the inverter (unless I'm drawing power from inside on the living room circuit). I figure hooking them together with a diode to keep them from discharging with the rest of the bank might work? Any insight on this point would be great.
The flow chart of the system w/o the power tool batteries should be from the sun, to the panel, regulated by the controller, throughout and filling the battery banks, into the inverter, powering the clean circuit and whatever I want to run.
I figure the cost to be $500 for the panels, $120 for the Inverter, 380 for the batteries, $100 for the charge controller, $150 for wires, connectors, misc. = $1250 w/ 500W of generation ~$1350 with 600W
--
I plan to use the system to run a small TV, my laptop and few things (about 500W total) during the day for 4-5 hrs at a time, 2-3 times a week as well as to keep my power tool batteries charged whenever I need them. (they see light use).
Please let me know what you think about the feasibility of such a system and my numbers. Thank you!
- Sam, The Solar Trough
Here's what I'm thinking:
I can reasonably spend only around 1000-2000 dollars right now - but I want solar power somewhere in my home.
I have several dedicated circuits ran and wired into my breaker box. The circuit I have in mind is a dedicated 4-plug AC wall outlet ran to my living room along side the rooms normal wiring - I've called it the 'clean' circuit. I did this for the home entertainment system, but it was never even installed so now I have a 15 amp breaker wired to a circuit essentially carrying no load.
What I want to do is disconnect the clean circuit from the mains and wire it, with the 15 amp breaker, into a 24V, 900-watt inverter (1800w Surge, or 15 amps at 120VAC). I think this means the breaker should trip if more than the maximum surge power of the inverter is demanded.
My solar array would be two 250-watt panels (perhaps up to 300-watt panels) wired into a a 30-amp MPPT charge controller. The garage roof is south, southwest facing at 55~ degrees with zero shadow cast potential year round.
The battery bank would consist of two 12v, 35Ah batteries (wired parrallel) and hooked to a third 12v, 135Ah battery in series giving me a 24V, 102Ah Bank in total.
I would like to find a way to use the 24V battery bank to charge my power tools lithium ion batteries (both 24V, 2Ah and 4Ah). I realize I could plug the AC powered charging docks that came with the appliance into the power inverter, but I'd like to keep the load off of the inverter (unless I'm drawing power from inside on the living room circuit). I figure hooking them together with a diode to keep them from discharging with the rest of the bank might work? Any insight on this point would be great.
The flow chart of the system w/o the power tool batteries should be from the sun, to the panel, regulated by the controller, throughout and filling the battery banks, into the inverter, powering the clean circuit and whatever I want to run.
I figure the cost to be $500 for the panels, $120 for the Inverter, 380 for the batteries, $100 for the charge controller, $150 for wires, connectors, misc. = $1250 w/ 500W of generation ~$1350 with 600W
--
I plan to use the system to run a small TV, my laptop and few things (about 500W total) during the day for 4-5 hrs at a time, 2-3 times a week as well as to keep my power tool batteries charged whenever I need them. (they see light use).
Please let me know what you think about the feasibility of such a system and my numbers. Thank you!
- Sam, The Solar Trough
Comment