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Jerry Atkiin April 24th 07 09:58 PM

Portable Solar Charging
 
I just installed two 31 Optima batteries in my sailboat. I had thought
about installing a good size solar panel however we decide for the amount
of season we have in Michigan and the amount of motoring we do it would
probably not be worth the expense. However I have seen on EBay a 20 watt
portable panel that I thought might be handy to just hook up when anchored
to minimize the amount of engine running time and if anything keep the
refigerator top up.

Two questions... as the input I doubt would exceed the current used is
there any problem just hooking the panel direct to the house battery
without a regulator?

How do I connect both batteries to the panel at the same time. By
connecting the panel to the "both" setting on the battery switch?

Jerry

Jerry Atkiin April 24th 07 11:58 PM

Portable Solar Charging
 
Charlie Morgan wrote in
:

On Tue, 24 Apr 2007 19:58:26 -0000, Jerry Atkiin
wrote:

I just installed two 31 Optima batteries in my sailboat. I had thought
about installing a good size solar panel however we decide for the
amount of season we have in Michigan and the amount of motoring we do
it would probably not be worth the expense. However I have seen on
EBay a 20 watt portable panel that I thought might be handy to just
hook up when anchored to minimize the amount of engine running
time and if anything keep the refigerator top up.

Yes they are AGM batteries but I assumed the that a 20 watt panel would

be more like a trickle charge and considering it would be use while
other things are running (lights, stereo, refrig, etc. at anchor) I did
not think it would over charge unless what you are sayihg in the base
input is too much for the battery to absorb then I would agree some type
of regulator is required. I am really clueless about this stuff hence
the post.

Thanks for your input.

Jerry

Are your new batteries AGM? If so, most solar panels put out voltage
that is high enough to ruin them. If that is the case, then you need a
proper regulator.

CWM



Larry April 25th 07 12:42 AM

Portable Solar Charging
 
Jerry Atkiin wrote in news:Xns991CA281EDD1tayana272
@216.168.3.44:

Two questions... as the input I doubt would exceed the current used is
there any problem just hooking the panel direct to the house battery
without a regulator?



Not a 20 watt panel like you're looking at. 20 watts is NOTHING! 20
watts is an anchor light. Only problem with that is it's only 20 watts
at NOON on a bright, sunny day with no clouds and no obstructions shading
the panel. It's only 20 watts for a couple of hours. The anchor light
is from dusk to dawn, 10 hours to 14 hours.

Charging the battery with a 20 watt panel and the tiniest fridge running
off the batteries will kill the battery 2 hours later than without the 20
watt panel....if the sun is bright, of course.

We need KILOWATT HOURS, not watt hours....Big difference!

Larry
--

Duffer April 25th 07 01:16 AM

Portable Solar Charging
 

"Larry" wrote Charging the battery with a 20 watt panel
and the tiniest fridge running
off the batteries will kill the battery 2 hours later than without the 20
watt panel....if the sun is bright, of course.

We need KILOWATT HOURS, not watt hours....Big difference!


Larry,

What you say is true if the boat is continually in use, like a liveaboard.
Lets say it puts out, on average 1amp for 8 hours on a nice sunny day in
Michigan. If the boat has a fridge, it probably draws about 2.5A on
average, so the panel will provide 40% of this for 1/3 of each day. Total
is 8 Ah/day or about 16 minutes motoring (on our boat).

But, if the boat sits at dock a good part of the time, the 20 Watt panel may
do some good. Lets say 6Ah/day for 5 days between weekend cruises. This
will put back 30Ah, or about 30% of what is needed to recharge a 200Ah bank
that is 50% discharged.

I have been thinking about installing one 80 or two 40-Watt units. These
would have capacity to recharge our 200Ah bank between cruises. When it is
operating at peak while cruising, it will put out the 5Amps that the fridge
draws when running. It will need a regulator and I would connect it to the
input of our battery combiner (which is actually the alternator output).

Still need to do some research on which unit(s) to buy.



Jere Lull April 25th 07 05:16 AM

Portable Solar Charging
 
On 2007-04-24 15:58:26 -0400, Jerry Atkiin said:

I just installed two 31 Optima batteries in my sailboat. I had thought
about installing a good size solar panel however we decide for the amount
of season we have in Michigan and the amount of motoring we do it would
probably not be worth the expense. However I have seen on EBay a 20 watt
portable panel that I thought might be handy to just hook up when anchored
to minimize the amount of engine running time and if anything keep the
refigerator top up.

Two questions... as the input I doubt would exceed the current used is
there any problem just hooking the panel direct to the house battery
without a regulator?

How do I connect both batteries to the panel at the same time. By
connecting the panel to the "both" setting on the battery switch?


We do this with a solid 12w cell. I only connect one battery at a time
to it, as I don't really trust two identical batteries to be truly
identical, but plugging it into the cigarette lighter would allow you
to chose 1, 2 or both.

The small cells are fine without a regulator for the 100+ AH of group 31s.

--
Jere Lull
Tanzer 28 #4 out of Tolchester, MD
Xan's new pages: http://web.mac.com/jerelull/iWeb/Xan/
Our BVI pages: http://homepage.mac.com/jerelull/BVI/


Larry April 26th 07 02:17 AM

Portable Solar Charging
 
"Duffer" wrote in news:hgwXh.17676$Uq.6520
@read2.cgocable.net:

Still need to do some research on which unit(s) to buy.


A windcharger with a charge regulator. Then it doesn't matter how much
power you use....The wind always blows....24/7 if the damned boat is
anchored out so it can drag...(c;

You don't have to sit in the dark with the windcharger.....

Larry
--

krj April 26th 07 02:20 AM

Portable Solar Charging
 
Larry wrote:
"Duffer" wrote in news:hgwXh.17676$Uq.6520
@read2.cgocable.net:

Still need to do some research on which unit(s) to buy.


A windcharger with a charge regulator. Then it doesn't matter how much
power you use....The wind always blows....24/7 if the damned boat is
anchored out so it can drag...(c;

You don't have to sit in the dark with the windcharger.....

Larry

But you have to turn the sound up on the stereo!

Larry April 26th 07 03:18 AM

Portable Solar Charging
 
krj wrote in news:weSXh.13859$vD4.1013@bigfe9:

But you have to turn the sound up on the stereo!



If you play your cards just right, she'll be makin' too much noise up in
the V-berth to hear the windcharger....(c;

If all you can hear is the windcharger, you'll know you screwed up!

Larry
--

Duffer April 26th 07 04:49 AM

Portable Solar Charging
 

"Larry" wrote in message
...
"Duffer" wrote in news:hgwXh.17676$Uq.6520
@read2.cgocable.net:

Still need to do some research on which unit(s) to buy.


A windcharger with a charge regulator. Then it doesn't matter how much
power you use....


Larry writes:

"The wind always blows...."

It does??? Not around here. That is why the solar chargers are needed.




Larry April 26th 07 05:24 AM

Portable Solar Charging
 
"Duffer" wrote in news:huUXh.18987$Uq.7208
@read2.cgocable.net:

It does??? Not around here. That is why the solar chargers are needed.




Hope yours is a POWER boat....(c;
Sailing's awfully boring with no wind....


Larry
--


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