Chuck,

What would the panel size before for 100 to 110watt?

How would the mounting be up a water tower, as far as wind-bearing in a 100mph 
or 120mph storm

Paul

From: Af [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of [email protected]
Sent: Friday, September 11, 2015 3:55 PM
To: af
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] a new one, I think...

I can get you a complete system for about $1/watt.  Panels, inverter and mount.

From: Forrest Christian (List Account)<mailto:[email protected]>
Sent: Friday, September 11, 2015 12:45 PM
To: af<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] a new one, I think...

Depending on where you are, you may want to consider a grid-tie system.
Let's assume $400/month @ 10c per KWH.   So 4000kWh/month.   133kWh/day.   
Assuming 5 hours of sun, you need 27kW of panel.
Solar panels are about a dollar a watt.   So figure $27K for panels. Inverters 
can be had for around 50 c a watt.   So add another $14K.
Total cost for gear then would be around $41K.   Note that this is a rough 
guess, and installation isn't included, etc.
Note that if your cost per kwh is bigger (i.e. you are actually using less 
power), then the cost of the system is going to go down.  At 15c per kwh, you 
can multiply everything by 75%.... which makes it even better.
-forrest


On Fri, Sep 11, 2015 at 12:29 PM, Paul Stewart 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Wow.. I find that extremely interesting …

I’d LOVE to find a way (or rather spend the time finding the right way) to do 
this at my house.  My electrical bill at my house is typically around 
$400/month.  The challenge is that even at $4800/year or $48k over 10 years 
let’s say for simple math – I’m not really sure there is anything in that price 
range that could provide for the power I need to be completely off grid (and 
sustain for 24-48 hours of limited daylight).

Am I totally wrong on this?

Thanks,
Paul


From: Af [mailto:[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>] On Behalf 
Of Bill Prince
Sent: Friday, September 11, 2015 1:01 PM
To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] a new one, I think...

According to a friend of mine "Anything can be built."


We have several solar sites, and when they have enough battery and panels, they 
are every bit as reliable as utility power. In fact, one site we have had 
installed for 4 years without a single power issue. Our older sites have had 
some relatively minor issues, as we learned how to do it.

But first, I would guess that your power requirements are closer to 90 or 100 
watts just doing a rough mental calculation.

Take the number of watts you really need (say 100 watts in your case). You need 
that 24 hours a day, so multiply that by 24 for 2,400 watt-hours per day. 
Multiply that by 10 (now 24,000 watt-hours). That's how much "battery" you 
need. Because batteries are rated on 100% discharge, you then need to double 
that amount (now at 48,000 watt-hours). Size your batteries according to that. 
You want ~~ 48,000 watt-hours of battery (close to 4,000 amp-hours if using 12 
volt batteries).

Then decide on how many watts you can get out of your solar panels on the worst 
day (generally December 21). You want your panels capable of fully recharging 
the batteries in about 1/2 of the solar time you have on that worst day. Where 
we are south of San Francisco, we get about 5 good hours on December 21 (37th 
parallel). You're at the 27th parallel, so you probably get another hour or so.

Just one more anecdote, we have numerous neighbors that live "off the grid". 
When the big storms hit, they are usually the only ones that still have power.


bp

<part15sbs{at}gmail{dot}com>


On 9/10/2015 6:00 PM, Paul McCall wrote:
OK, so I am working with a grounding expert today, getting some opinions on a 
couple difficult towers, and one of the first suggestions he has for me as I 
mention that I am looking to do fiber / DC up this tower is� �Have you 
considered going solar up the tower?�� (to eliminate power surges 
completely from going up the tower)
�
Hmmmm�
�
So my brain starts wrestling with that��� Is it practical?��
�
Say on a tower with a Netonix DC powered switch running at 48v or 24v, powering 
�6 ePMP APs �and 2 �320APs, 2 Mikrotik Bhs, and a small Mikortik 
router.�
�
Would be about 50 watts maximum according to my quick calcs.�
�
Not knowing anything about solar, has battery technology developed enough that 
it would be practical (size wise) to have enough batteries and a charge 
controller up in a box on a tower?� And what size solar panel would I need to 
drive that?
�
Paul




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Forrest Christian CEO, PacketFlux Technologies, Inc.
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