Let us know how it goes

If you are in the storm zone, we wish you all the best. If you have a backup power system that survived or can cobble something up, let us know what worked. If your system failed, let us know about that, too, so we can learn from it.
I spoke with John Sunday night. The blogs have been getting an overhaul and he is having trouble making posts, so I thought I’d let you know that he and the family flew out west to wait it out.
They are fine, but yes, he is worried about his home, the business and you, the customers.
The storm really made a mess of the Bahamas, and though nobody really knows what will happen, it looks like Miami is in good shape. Just a wiggle to the west and it could get really bad up the state or in Georgia or the Carolinas. Cross your fingers.
Right now it is 0330, Monday morning, and I don’t have all my resources, but will soon tell you about some of the discussions John and I have had about emergency power, including how he rigged a system in his his hi-rise apartment.  Check some of the other blogs for tips too–Neal

Can I Do It Myself?

So you’ve been thinking about solar power or battery backup and wondering, “Can I do it myself?”  Well, let’s stop for a moment if you really meant, “May I do it myself?”  Those are two different things and I’ll talk about both, separately, but I wanted to point out both considerations.  Without any more information, I’d say, “Maybe” to both. 

Can you?  Let’s talk about the physical requirements.  I’m 65 years old, am 30 pounds too heavy, have too much blood pressure and all the bendy parts don’t bend like they used to.  I know two other guys my age doing solar and one 75 year old.  If you aren’t much worse off than that, you have potential.  

This is my current project, in Phase 3.  I call it my Solar Shed, with 11KW on the roof.

 Can you pick up a 65 pound solar panel or battery?  Lift the panel over your head?  Somebody’s going to have to do it and it won’t climb up on the roof or rack by itself.  There will be heavy stuff.

Are you clever enough to come up with some apparatus or con a buddy to help you lift a 200 pound inverter in place to bolt to the wall?  Sometimes a good idea works better than brute force. Ratchet straps can raise a heavy inverter.

Do you have the tools?  In addition to the usual hand tools, you may need big cutters, crimpers, soldering supplies, a basic volt/ohmmeter, ladder, screw gun and maybe more. 

Do your tools have a lot of blood on them? None means you aren’t using them or are good at cleaning up.   A little is inevitable, but too much may be a message to hire a pro. 

Do you get gifts of tools at birthday and Christmas?  If so, you may be ok.  If not, why not?  Do people think you are dangerous with a tool?  Do family members run to call 911 when they see you with a power tool?  Some people are just not meant to use tools. 

Can you successfully, rewire a lamp, assemble a kid’s swing set or Ikea furniture or install a car stereo?  If so, you may be ok. Courtney, 64,  puts in the last screws in an arched solar pergola over his BBQ.  Yeah, we bent them.

Do you have the knowledge of how solar power systems are connected and regulations for connecting them?  If you don’t, there is a lot of free information on the Internet, diagrams of sample systems are available and folks like Sun Electronics offer kits and pre-fab hardware that requires minimal connection. 

Those are very convenient and can save money over a la carte.  You can get loads of ideas by downloading free back issues of Home Power Magazine at https://archive.org/details/home_power_magazine . 

Tom is 75 and he’s doing his own 10KW solar

 There are a couple of things I want to warn you about that may not be obvious to a newcomer.  Most solar panels put out a modest voltage of 18-40 volts.  That might give you a little tingle if wires were on a sweaty arm, but individually solar modules are pretty safe.  HOWEVER, if you are using an MPPT type charge controller on a battery system (and you should for efficiency), you might have several panels wired in series for maybe 120-150 volts going into the charge controller.  That much is going to do you harm if you touch it.  Your panels normally use MC3, MC4 or Tyco connectors that won’t let you touch the harmful voltage, but you will use bare wire to connect to disconnects, fuse holders and the charge controller.  I make a point of doing the bare wire work before plugging in the last panel connector and I’ve not been bitten yet.  In my early days as a broadcast engineer I routinely worked with radio transmitters with 10,000 volt power supplies.  My boss told me to always keep one hand in my pocket so that I couldn’t make a circuit through my heart if I slipped up.  I never wore rings or a watch to work, either.  Insulated gloves are a good idea, too. 

64 year old Stan is upgrading the solar at his hunting camp.

Now if you think 150 volts is worrisome, and it is, consider that if you are connecting a grid tie system,  you may be dealing with 600 volts!!!  Now, aside from my advice to “DON’T TOUCH”, there is a characteristic of DC power of which you might not be aware.  It arcs.  If you try to unplug one of your MC4 cables while the system is charging or grid-tied, there is a good chance that the current will try to continue to flowing in the form of an arc.  This can vaporize a connector, which will have to be replaced.  Do your unplugging at night or when the system is shut down. 

Did the last two paragraphs frighten you or did you just store that info away?  If it scares you, you might start on something simpler or just call in a knowledgeable friend or a pro.  If not, and you aren’t any older or feebler than I am, go for it!  The hardest part may just be deciding what you want to do. 

I take my solar power on adventures….or it takes me…thousands of miles.

 One last thing, if you want to get some construction experience, working with laying out the structure, framing, roofing and wiring,—maybe even solar— consider volunteering with Habitat for Humanity or one of these groups that builds houses for disabled vets.  You will learn skills, build confidence and find out if you are made for this sort of thing. —Neal

Quick and easy emergency solar

John and I have been talking about using solar power to survive in relative comfort after a storm.  In my efforts to mostly eliminate my old 24v solar power system I realized I was putting together what would make a good example for survival power.  Why did I not eliminate the 24v system completely?  My solar electric launch, Sun King, is in the Solar Shed and needs to be kept charged up in the dark shed.  In return, the onboard inverter runs my shop air compressor.  Anyway, the old control board is coming down as my control room gets walls and a bit of civilization.  Yup, Man Cave. 

First, let’s talk about panels.  Are your panels going to survive the storm?  My Solar Shed PV shingles are rated for 60 mph, so there is a real good chance that winds from the right direction could do away with some or all of them.  What about conventional panels?  Believe it or not, there have been post storm studies to see what stayed put and what blew away.  Click on the link for some interesting reading. https://rmi.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/Islands_SolarUnderStorm_Report_digitalJune122018.pdf 

What I am proposing here is not storm resistant.  In fact, my plan is to unplug and unbolt the panels and store them in a safe place.  Under the house?  Under the bed?  I go for under my pickup truck which gets parked in a gulch, the panels duct taped into a heavy mass.  Heck, we’ve even parked airplanes down there.  The winds always blow right over anything we put down there.  This won’t work if you are a coastal dweller.  Maybe if you are a coastal dweller you should stuff them in the minivan and be somewhere else when the storm comes!

So, imagine the storm is passed and the winds have died down.  Your house is livable, but there is no power.  You want some lights and the fridge running at least.  What I am suggesting here won’t run your central air, but if you have a 5000btu window unit, it will run and make a big difference, despite the small size. 

First, retrieve your solar panels.  You can make some temporary mounts by nailing up some 2x4s.  There are usually plenty of them from houses that blew apart.  Heck, you can even lash up some saplings using those Scout skill you got when you were 12.  You just want your panels to be reasonably stable.  I have put some flat on the ground for over a year.  Whatever works.  In this case, for my boat charger, I ran 3 treated 2x4s diagonally, nailed to the bottom of the solar shed eaves.  Deck screws or ring shank nails are good about staying where you put them.  I then put crossbar 2x4s spaced for the length of the panels.

 If you routinely have some strong winds you might want to drive some angle iron into the ground to hold down the bottoms.

 The panels, I use 3 to the rack, can be held in place with aluminum angle, about 2” lengths, and self drilling screws.  I use longer screws in the wood.  Don’t have a power screwdriver or cordless drill?  How can you live that way???

 You could just as easily screw the boards to fence posts or lean them against a dead car, in a pinch.  Not shown, I also screwed the panels together. 

 Finished product.  Well, it needs paint on the wood for protection if you keep it long term.

 You can see I still have 6 more panels to put up on racks, at this point.  The 1500 hp fan has not blown over the panels just leaning, so I am pretty confident about the ones on the racks.

 Out of the weather, I used a scrap of plywood, 2 common fused disconnects, like you might use for an air conditioner compressor, and a cheap charge controller left over from evaluations for my Solar Yacht project.  It’s a decent little controller, but the displays fail over time.  ALWAYS connect the battery first so the controller can determine what voltage you are running, and THEN connect the panels.  Although they look nice and professional, you don’t need preprinted placards to label things.  A felt marker will get the message across.  Ok, ok, I will put some printed labels up.  There are websites and programs that let you design and print your own labels, signs and placards.  You could premake the whole assembly on the plywood, with quick connectors and keep the unit in a safe place for rapid setup after the storm. 

“Goof Off” and fine steel wool will clean off that tacky Magic Marker labelling when you get some proper decals.

 If you are the suspicious type, you note that you don’t actually see any batteries.  They are in the boat, 350amp-hours of 8v golf car batteries.  This is actually how you might do batteries in a survival situation.  If you had a battery bank, it is unlikely that it went away.  If not, there will be cars, trucks, tractors, etc that have been crushed or flooded.  Maybe your own.  They can be a source of batteries.  ASK, if possible.  Don’t get shot for taking a battery!  In this case, the boat has batteries and an inverter, so I am good to make power.  I have a 2500 watt inverter for my 12v truck, when it is running.  I have run a fridge with that and, more importantly, a coffeemaker, but you don’t really want to leave your car running.  You did fill the tank before the storm, didn’t you?  But, you still don’t want to leave it running.  This little rig pictured above can charge the battery in your vehicle to run the inverter to run the fridge and Mr. Coffee.  Microwave, too! 

A golf car is a perfectly wonderful survival aid.  Not only does it provide a LOT of battery, you can bolt on a 48v inverter for the newer ones (there are 36v inverters, but they are harder to come by) for portable power.  There’s the transportation value, too.  This same charging rig will automatically adjust to 48v operation.  NOT ALL charge controllers go up to 48v, so check before you buy. 

This 2500 watt modified sine wave inverter got painted red with the rest of the car, and ran the microwave just fine. 

 Oops, reality check, yeah my 2500 watt truck inverter will run those appliances, but what about the charging?  3×270 watt panels /12= is 67.5 amps.  It is a 40 amp controller.   Use just two of the panels instead of 3 and you are good.  You math geniuses will note that two panels can produce 45 amps at 12v, but they won’t at that angle and if you use a pwm controller you’ll not get even close.  On the 24v system it has room to spare with all 3 modules.  Don’t forget to calculate this stuff and don’t forget to have all of the tools, fasteners, cables and connectors that you need.  A dry run drill is a good way to check.  Plastic totes are good for holding the kit, less panels and 2x4s. 

OK, so what does this cost?  I scrounged most of it.  I had the disconnects left over from something else, but I think they are maybe $10 at Home Depot/Lowes.  The charge controller is an MPPT unit that I already had.  Cheap pwm controllers are readily available for a throwaway system like this, or you can get an industrial strength controller for maybe $500.  Your choice.  In a pinch, if you match the panel voltage to the battery voltage and keep the load up, you can get away without a charge controller, but be forewarned that inverters can be fussy about their voltage range and batteries can be killed from over or under charging.  Batteries, ideally, are something you already have in a car, boat, tractor, golf car, RV etc.  You might get an inexpensive survival inverter, even if you have a nice one in a PV power system.  We are talking about backup, here.  A fridge and a microwave WILL run on the so-called modified sine wave models.  John does not have the absolute cheapest inverters, but he has good prices on inverters with a good track record.  MOST cheap inverters you see on ebay have drastically exaggerated ratings.  If you don’t have any of this stuff, the Puerto Rico kits that John put together after their storm are pretty much everything you need at a great price. 

Ok, how do you get the power into the house?  If you have a generator plug and a transfer switch you just plug it in with an appropriate cable.  The circuits on the transfer box need to be within reason for the amount of power you have.  Forget the clothes dryer, range and central air.  Concentrate on lights, microwave, fridge and coffee pot.  (Coffee makers also make hot water for Ramen noodles, soups, teas, etc.)  DON’T have the generator plug?  Use a HEAVY DUTY (12 ga) extension cord and run it in through a window.  Use an outlet strip to plug in the fundamental loads.  OR don’t use the outlet strip, which guarantees nobody will run Mr. Keurig and the microwave and fridge at the same time, possibly blowing a fuse and ending it all.  Umm, you do have a spare fuse, don’t you? 

OK, these are just some things to think about as Hurricane Season approaches.  There are so many ways to prep for power after the lines go down! 

East and West are Subject to Wandering

Archæologists have discovered that it is not just modern mankind that buries its dead with their feet to the east, it has been going on for a long time and in a lot of cultures.  They have also noticed that all of the bones in a particular ancient burial ground are buried in more of a loose version of east or sort of east, rather than on a true line.  The reason, they conclude, is that the sun is on a different arc at different times of  year, so folks got buried according to where the sun was at the time.  The ancient ones didn’t have smart phones with a compass app. 

I spend a lot of time with archæologists and never really thought much about that business of a wandering east and west until I got serious about solar.  The airstrip at my farm heads east-west along a section line and I just sort of expected the sun to rise at one end and set at the other when I installed my panels on the northern edge.  Sometimes it does.  Right now it rises over the blacksmith shop, which is more east-north-east than east.  Early in the morning, instead of those first rays hitting my panels and filling my starving batteries, they are lighting up the backside of the Solar Shed!  Man, that sucks.  Summer is supposed to be that special solar time of the year, with its long days and high angles.  Turns out, not so much. 

Well, no worry, early morning sun is at low angles and doesn’t give you much power, anyway.  Right?  Tell that to the batteries.

If Only the Sun Flew Right Down the Runway—Look at the Offset of the Plane’s Shadow in this Afternoon Shot

 Then it gets a little higher and what happens?  THAT tree blocks the first two charge controller groups of sun until noon.  If the sun flew right down the runway, chasing the Airtractors, all would be well.  To make matters worse, the big oak has grown, moving closer to the solar shed.  Yeah, I have trimmed it, but there are limits as to how high I will climb a tree with a heavy chainsaw.  I’m not nearly as immortal as I used to be.  The solar shed is also 65’ closer to the tree, as it, too, has grown.  The crown of an oak behind the shed is growing and threatening to shade things and some pines on the west end, though well away, are catching the afternoon sun as it arcs back to the north. 

The moral of the story is to put your panels well away from the trees.  Even if you are a tree lover, some must die.  Best that this happens before you build your array.  Why don’t I cut down the trees?  Murphy’s Law says that anything that can go wrong, will.  Neal’s Law says that if anything goes wrong, it will go wrong on the most expensive stuff.  Neal’s Corollary says if anybody has a video camera running then the first two laws are a sure bet.  Go to youtube and look up videos of people cutting down trees! 

There are ways of dealing with trees.  The expensive way is to hire a pro tree crew to come in and take the tree down, starting from the top.  This is expensive, but usually safe.  Another way, and I get this idea from nature, is to just kill the tree and the limbs will start falling in small pieces, straight down until you have a manageable post.  I have 3 trees I am working on now and they are taking their sweet time about dying.  Take a chainsaw and “girdle” the tree by cutting all around, just through the bark and the layer that passes water and nutrients up.  That didn’t work.  Take a weed torch and burn the bark all around.  That didn’t work.  Drill a series of one inch holes around the tree and pack them with salt.  That didn’t work.  Super Oaks!  Fill the holes and grooves with Roundup. 

One of the trees is starting to look a little sick.  Eventually it’ll get the job done and the trees will slowly crumble.  Don’t worry, tree lovers, I’m a tree farmer and I’ll make more…just a little further away.  So, the moral of the story is that you shouldn’t just kind of nestle your array in with Mother Nature, because she will try to keep the sun to herself.  Plant your array clear of trees to the south, east and west and maybe just a bit to the north.  Stand in the middle of where your array will be, facing south.  Hold your arms straight out and bring them as far back as they’ll go.  That angle back should make a pretty good template for your arc of clear space. 

And don’t think that planting trees in front of your solar panels will make them twice as green, like these folks did in Japan!  How well do you think this is going to work out?  Photo is from Kyocera.

–Neal

Think Outside the Box

The purpose of this post is mostly to stimulate thought and open up some possibilities for you.  Many folks would find these ideas impractical or even impossible if you live in an apartment or have a strict homeowners association.  Wild stuff, but maybe there’s a mad scientist among you who could make it work. 

If you know John Kimball, Sun Electronics’ fearless leader, he has been on a crusade for decades to bring affordable solar power to the people.  As far as the PV modules go, he’s there.  Solar panels are no longer the problem.  I have noticed pricing on charge controllers dropping and pretty soon that will no longer be a huge part of the equation.  With inverters, the problem is that there is such a flood of cheap Chinese inverters that you might be tempted to go with one of them, whereupon it is quite likely you’ll find you made a mistake and end up buying the more expensive model, too.  What I am looking at as MY biggest issue in my personal solar power systems (yes, plural) is storage. 

Where do you store your power?  In a battery, right?  Utility scale battery and electric automobiles would probably drive the price way down, but on the other hand there is a huge demand.  LOTS of battery research is going on and someday someone will come up with the super cheap-but-good battery.  In the meantime, there are OTHER possibilities to store energy, though not necessarily electrical energy.

Big utilities have used a couple of neat tricks over the years  Hydro plants just let the water back up behind the dam, then run it through the turbines to make electricity, as needed.  Some utilities not normally considered as hydro, take their excess electricity to pump water to a lake on a hill, then run it back down the hill through a turbine when they don’t have enough power from their regular supply.  Some are now using pumped storage with solar, to keep the lights on at night.  Now, I am thinking that this would be impractical for you and I, given the space required for a couple of lakes and a power station. 

Another big utility trick is to pump air into underground caverns, using surplus power, and then letting the compressed air run a turbine to make extra power when needed.  Again, that’s not going to be good for most of us.  I don’t know about you, but I am pretty sure there aren’t any underground caverns where I live.  This is not to say that compressed air could not be used, and in more ways than you might think.  Let’s say your solar power system has your regular battery topped up for the morning and not much is running in the house, why not have it burn off the extra power from your panels by running an air compressor?  For this kind of duty you’d need a pretty tough compressor, but they are out there.

You pump the air into a huge pressure tank (huge being a point of inconvenience to many), perhaps one like they use at those propane storage yards.  Such a tank would be expensive, if bought new, but you can find amazing values in industrial surplus.  You might find one for scrap value.  When the sun goes down and the regular battery is getting low, you send the compressed air to an air motor.  You may not be aware of these, but they are very common in industry and can be very durable.  The air motor spins a DC generator to charge your batteries.  This is dirt simple to do, but huge.  Far fetched?  Under the city of Paris, France, there is an abandoned network of pipes from an era where a central compressor station transmitted power to businesses all over the city, powering industry! 

Google it and read THIS article. You can store a lot of power with compressed air.  Even run a car!

There are side benefits to consider, too.  When you compress any gas it gets hot.  This is how heat pumps work.  If you put your hand on the top of a running compressor then you will quickly notice it is quite hot as you pull your blistered fingers away.  If you put that freshly compressed air through a heat exchanger you can heat your domestic water supply.  On the reverse side of the process, when the air expands through a motor it comes out quite cool.  The air can be run through a heat exchanger for storage, or exhausted directly into a room to keep it cool. 

Ok, that’s pretty off the wall stuff.  How about one that is so simple, even your cat understands it: thermal storage.  The cat finds a spot where the sun shines through the window on a cool morning and is warm and cozy.  John sells a thermal solar water heater that mounts in a sunny spot.  It uses some super simple, but highly efficient technology that will do a dandy job of replacing the electricity or gas you use to heat your bath water or if  you can use several of them and greater storage, you could probably do a good job of supplying water to a hydronic home heating system.  You can run the hot water through pipes embedded in your slab, through baseboard heat exchangers, or through a radiator inline with your central air handler.  Heating water directly from the sun bypasses the solar electric, charge controllers and batteries.  Storage is just an insulated tank.

I have some other mad scientist ideas I will share with you as information is firmed up.  A friend dropped off an extra pallet of solar modules and microinverters he had to use in the ongoing solar air-conditioning project.  In conjunction with that, I’ll have some gear available to test some of the old wives’ tales about what you can and cannot do with certain pieces of equipment.  I don’t think this will turn out quite as destructive as the time we used a 12 gauge shotgun to blow holes in a panel (it still worked), but there could be smoke.

–Neal

Microinverters!

What is a microinverter and why in the world would you want one?  The first answer is easy.  Whereas a regular grid-tie inverter takes the power from a bunch of panels and injects it into the powerline,  a single microinverter bolts onto the back of each panel.  The solar panel’s MC4 connectors plug into one side of the microinverter and a connection to the 240 ac power line plugs into the other side.  This makes setting up a grid tie system very easy, though in most cases you still have to have the disconnects and special metering arrangements made with your power company. Look there’s a box full of microinverters!  A company called Enphase is the big player.  Their fuzzy “e” logo is very disturbing to someone like me with eye problems.

  The problem I saw with them when I first looked into the matter was that each micro inverter was close to $200, or about double or triple the price of a typical solar panel from Sun Electronics.  Then there was the power output.  The M215, shown above, only outputs 215 watts.  Hook it to a 300 watt panel and you still get 215 watts, so you are wasting some of your power at peak times.  Enphase makes the argument, though, that you get more consistent power output over the course of the day.  It is kind of a dubious argument, but there is some merit to it in special cases, such as a project I am currently working on. Shortcomings aside, there may be some good to come of using these.  For some reason, tons of them have been dumped, brand-new-in-box, onto the open market at dirt cheap prices, like around $30.  (A word of warning, though, make sure you can get the cables and beware of the price of cables! ) At that price it gets interesting, but you need to use caution.  A friend drove down from South Carolina and dropped off a case of the M215s and a pallet of panels he wanted me to try.  The M215 uses a lower voltage than the newer models, so he made sure he brought me a pile of 60 cell panels.  Turned out they were really 96 cell panels, shipped by mistake.  He had not even looked at them.  I keep telling him to buy from Sun Electronics, but he doesn’t listen!  The 96 cell panels put out nearly 60 volts whereas a 60 cell panel is usually around 36, open circuit.  72 and 96 panels are now the norm and I guess that is why the older microinverters are on the surplus market. All but two of those 60 cell panels are equipped with microinverters. The blue ones are 270 watts and the black ones are 300 watts.

 Now I mentioned that having that controlled output could be useful.  An experiment that we are running involves connecting the microinverter’s power line to the MOTOR side of the contactor in a central a/c compressor.  I have 10 microinverters connected to my a/c.  What happens is…nothing, until the thermostat clicks the contactor starting the a/c and connecting to the microinverters.  After 5 minutes, the sync light comes on and suddenly the a/c is using very little from the powerline. Huh?  Okay, here’s the deal, a grid provider does not allow grid intertie, but mixing the power from the microinverters  with the power from the grid, you get to use the solar power without backfeeding to the power company.  So even though we are connecting grid intertie, there is zero flow and nothing for their electronic meter to report.  This, of course, assumes you have selected an amount of microinverter power that does not exceed what the a/c is consuming.  Here’s a picture of the meters inside my upstairs a/c compressor.  The bottom meter is the power line.  Lower left corner of it shows the a/c drawing 75.2 watts.  Of course, the a/c needs more than that.  The middle meter shows the power actually being consumed by the compressor and the top meter shows what is coming from the microinverters. 

 Because the microinverters take about 5 minutes to sync with the line before providing power, you want long run cycles.   This scheme works best if you use a programmable thermostat to cool like crazy during sun hours and then ride through the night on the stored cool. At the present, this project is not on the grid power line, but on my solar microgrid.  Yes, the microinverter WILL sync to a good sine wave inverter!  It is taking a lot of the load off of my smallish inverter and definitely letting my batteries charge up quicker during the day. If you try this with your a/c on the grid, is this going to save you a ton of money?  Probably not, but it is a fun experiment.   I have a few more microinverter experiments I am working on and I’ll let you in on them, soon.  If you want to try some of this stuff for yourself, John’s guys can fix you up with some super deals on 60 cell modules—Neal

Power Use Optimization and Free Energy Storage

In my last post I talked about some seemingly off the wall, but doable, energy storage contrivances.  As for the compressed air storage, apparently some pretty clever people have already thought about this.  Follow this link to a pretty thorough  discussion of the subject.

https://www.lowtechmagazine.com/2018/05/ditch-the-batteries-off-the-grid-compressed-air-energy-storage.html.

There are some pretty neat pages at Low Tech Magazine and No Tech Magazine. Speaking of energy storage and No Tech, how about storing energy with NO equipment?  This is coming out of the solar air conditioning research.  First, it is a no-brainer to state that your solar electric electrical system works best on a sunny day, right?  Well, fact is, it doesn’t really draw in useable energy at night, even though a full moon might make the green light come on on your system.  So, it makes sense to use the energy when it is being made, rather than tax the batteries so severely at night.

Here is what I am doing and it is so simple. During the day, my programmable thermostat is set to a fairly cool temperature, within the limits of what the array can supply.  Usually, that is around 76 degrees.  I am looking into building a smarter thermostat that will take into account the state of the battery charge and the weather, so that I can squeeze out a little more performance without being here to manually manage things.  At night, the thermostat gets set to 79.  Some folks could not go for that range, but as a native Southerner who grew up without a/c, no sweat.  Literally.  The reduced humidity of the a/c is as big a factor as the temperature on one of those hot, muggy days.

Ok, so where’s the storage?  What’s the medium.  Look around your house. Sheetrock walls, tile floor, pots and pans, that cast iron bathtub, brick or stone fireplace…anything and everything with some thermal mass.  You’ll have the cooler temps when you are stirring about and need it cooler for comfort, but at night, when you are reading, watching the tube or sleeping, the temperature will slowly creep up as thermal mass will slowly absorb the heat seeping in.   At a high in the high 70s should be fine, especially with a ceiling fan.  I still have the a/c running some during the night, especially those nights, but not nearly enough to run down the battery bank.

Just leaving the thermostat at one temperature has its merits, but for using the power when you are making it, changing temps makes for longer run cycles to optimize efficiency.  I know from observation that my PV is putting out enough power to run the a/c without getting into the battery about 9:30 a.m. in the summer.  Having the program go into cool-down, starting then, means I can run the a/c without taking the battery down any lower and any time after that I am building power to fully recharge by the end of day.  In the late afternoon, I cross that threshold again around 5 p.m.  The frequent afternoon thunderstorms can play havoc with that, though, hence the quest for a smarter thermostat.

My house is powered by a hybrid system, part on and part off grid, so I still get a power bill.  I suspect some of my neighbors have cooler homes than mine, but I bet they have bigger power bills, too.

—Neal

Show and Tell

I wanted to show you a couple of examples of some really nice solar work I have seen lately.

I’ve known Courtney for 60 years.  Back then Courtney was a guy name and, in his case, it still is.  Courtney has gone nuts for solar in the last few years and he is at it again.  In addition to our joint solar a/c schemes, he decided that his curved solar pergola grid-tie is not putting out enough to suit him, so he’s adding modules. There is no more room on the pergola, but there is plenty on his north fence, which happens to be close to his grid tie gear. Between the fence and the retaining wall we built (somehow I got roped in on that) he came up with a quick and easy mount that looks good, I think.  Under the panels it would be easy to integrate some sort of box for storing yard tools or such.

This is just to try out…He’s adding more.

Then there’s Daryl, to whom John introduced me a week or so ago.  OMG what a system he has and what beautiful work he does!  Daryl lives in a barn in Texas.  No kidding, it is a Texas thing and they call them “Barndominiums.”  This is neither Daryl’s first barndo nor his first solar power rodeo.  Sadly, there was a fire that destroyed the first.  Texas has some serious hail, so his first system actually had doors that slide on rails to protect the solar panels!  The new barndo has 16kw of modules, ganged inverters and a monster battery.  And it is simply elegant!  It is grid-tie with battery backup and he sells more power to the grid than he uses. Here’s where the kilowatts begin

Here is where kilowatts live…in the giant BullDog battery.  Moving that dawg requires mechanical assistance.

And everything has to pass through here

THREE inverters, Daryl???  Really???

Okay, I admit it.  I’m jealous.—Neal Photos: Courtney and Daryl

Cool It

I never thought I’d be happy about a tropical depression starting to spin up in the Gulf, but it has been really, miserably and mind-numbingly hot around here and the rains have helped in that department.  We’ve topped 100 degrees for days, usually hitting 103-105 after lunch.  It has been so hot that I have been wearing welding gloves to handle modules I am remounting.  Of course, inside the Solar Shed, it is even hotter and even the a/c out there is no good until I get some insulation.

Fortunately, that temp is within specs for all of my gear, but I know the fans and capacitors will last longer if I can make it run cooler.  Further, since it has temperature sensing that cuts back the wattage to keep the temperature down, running cooler will put more watts back into my batteries.

I have some charge controllers I am evaluating for John to possibly carry and they have built in thermometers.  The display was showing 57C, which is right at 135F for Americans.  The charge controller has a fan and the entire aluminum case is designed to dissipate heat, but it was hot to the touch and the fan was always running.  The thing is, the entire back, over 1/3 of the surface area, was pressed against the wooden mounting panel, effectively insulating it.  Why not mount charge controllers on standoffs?  A drilled piece of rod, a stack of washers or a slice of old broomstick with a hole down the middle would each make a dandy standoff.  I had some aluminum heat sinks I found on ebay that may or may not do even better.

Note the fins behind the charge controllers.

I removed the old screws, smeared some silicone heat sink grease (available online or at an electronics store) on the heat sink, wedged it behind the controller and snugged down four new, longer, screws.  That’s all there was to the first one, so I did the second.  In no time the controllers’ internal temp dropped 14C or 25F. 

I suspect that simple spacers would do about as well.  This afternoon, after a thundershower, it was only 98F in The Shed and I noticed that the fans were not even running.  I think I will watch this a few days and try it on the others.

If your mounting panel is metal, then you already have temperature dissipation help.  For anyone else, this is a good, cheap mod. Now as to why I was arranging panels in the hot sun, it isn’t just cooling down the equipment I am working on.  Nope, I am continuing the quest for solar powered a/c.  Early small scale tests have shown promise (mostly meaning I haven’t started a fire) so I am making room to dedicate 8 to 11 modules to running a conventional a/c on solar with no wires going into the house and only three going into the outside cabinet.  Watch for that.  It may take a while to get all the details ready for you, but the mod will work in heatpump season, too. 

I do have some tried and true solar a/c that I wrote about in the blog.  That may have disappeared when the blog blew up, so we will try to get that reposted.  I am running BOTH of my 30 year old Rheem central air systems and most of my other circuits on a single 5kw inverter, and it isn’t that hard to do.  Watch for it to reappear if you can’t find it.

–Neal

RTFM!!!

RTFM!!! That stands for Read The Fine Manual. There are variants on that acronym, depending on your vocabulary.

That’s what we used to say when a customer wanted to know how to work something he bought from us, but was unwilling to read the instructions. This happens a lot with solar stuff, too. You may have products that can do more work for you, saving you from having to buy other gear. Wouldn’t you like to know stuff like that?

Case in point, I had a problem with having too much power on a sunny day with lots of puffy cumulus clouds. The charge controllers would get all settled down in the shade of the cloud, then it would pass and it’d go high enough to trip overvoltage conditions on the inverter and/or one of the charge controllers. The one charge controller would shut down until manually reset, the inverter would clear itself as soon as the other charge controllers caught up with the increased sunshine, usually just a couple of seconds. It really wasn’t a huge deal to me, but the princesses do not like to have their afternoon DVD features interrupted, not even for a few seconds.

I can think of lots of ways of dealing with this. Setting the dominant charge controllers worked out most of it, but it could still happen. A diversion load controller, like the windcharger crowd uses would be perfect, except it costs several hundred bucks for one of those. I think it is a C40 charge controller that some folks use for solar can do the same trick, but I don’t have one and don’t want to spend several hundred bucks for one of those, either. You should see a pattern here about my reluctant spending habits.

In my younger days, I’d have simply designed and built a custom controller to disconnect several banks of solar panels, putting the system on a more defensive stance. I don’t want to be bothered with that, anymore.

It turns out, though, if I just RTFM on stuff I already own, lots of gear has extra functionality built in that nobody ever uses or maybe they under use it. For example, let’s take the FlexMax family of charge controllers. If you’ve bought one of John’s kits, there’s a good chance that you have one or more of these, already. It is a popular model and built like a tank. Pop the hood and you will discover a tiny connection block that is programmable to drive a relay six ways from Sunday.

It’s the little gray terminal block marked 12v Aux Control on my revision.

This won’t do much as it is, but it will drive a 12v relay like the one that beeps the horn or rolls up the windows on your car. You can buy these, with a wired socket, at your auto parts store or Ebay. The relay, in turn, can control 30 or 40 amps of load or drive a contactor to solve my problem by disconnecting some banks of solar when the battery is charged. It can be programmed normally on, normally off, high voltage trip, low voltage trip or more, if you RTFM.

What can you do with this? Well, you can control a light to come on at night and off during the day. You can use it to enable high power loads, like a water heater or an a/c, when the battery is happy and not when it needs a little help, like on a cloudy day. Charge your electric vehicle when the main bank is good. Sound an alarm if the battery is low. Turn a fan on or off if your equipment room gets hot/cold. This thing has skills!

Study the description of the capabilities and you may think of more ways to use it. RTFM!

By: Neal Collier


Post navigation