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the math is easy enough to figure out, a lot of people gave you some
good information on this thread. for my own deep cycle systems i've noticed it never works out like the math says it should though, never, not in actual practice. you kind of imagine all these perfect numbers, 12 volts and 100 amp hours and that means you can do this task for such-and-such a time and it'll take your solar cell such-and-such time to recharge and all this. and there are even charts that give you an idea of the danger areas for depth of discharge, that is, discharging the batteries too much and too often, and how many times you can go to certain levels before you have to get new batteries, etc. my experience has been that in the end the math is ok for like a really general idea, but that's about it. the math quickly turns into non-sense in the face of harsh reality. in actual practice your battery bank is always in some weird state of charge that's hard to measure because it varies so much with temperature, battery age, what angle the batteries are sitting at, how much water you put in it last time you serviced them, etc. and who knows what your solar panels are doing depending on time of day, cloud cover, etc, and the same for your wind generator, and even your alternator, none of it has very much to do with what it's rated at, or what the specifications claim it's going to do. then your loads are so variable too, which lights will you have on at which times ? how often is the compressor going to flip on in your refrigerator ? how many amps is your starter going to draw ? does humidity affect any of it ? etc. in reality it's a crap shoot, and nobody really has any idea what their system is doing most of the time, and it's even hard to measure the voltage on the batteries because power is going into them from the solar panels and things most of the time, even on shady days. and even if you could measure the battery banks voltage it doesn't give a real measure of the state of charge. so you design it the best you can, fit in as many batteries as you have space for, try to minimize how much power you are wasting, try to keep everything maintained (especially your batteries), try to put in as much power generation (solar and wind) as you can, then cross your fingers and hope for the best. i mean, really, does anyone really have any idea how many amp hours are in their battery bank right now ? lol. yes, yes, i know, your battery power meter tells the whole truth G. my personal experience has been that it's a bunch of voodoo. ![]() |
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