I have a regulator on my solar array which shunts the energy to my water  
heater when the regulator senses that the batteries are fully charged.
 
I have three Siemens solar cells and a Air X wind generator to charge my  
six golf cart batteries (6V each).
 
David Hoyt
Sovereignty
Catalina 27 #65
ahsovereignty.com
 
 
In a message dated 4/14/2010 7:21:22 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,  
[email protected] writes:

 
 
 
Judy,
 
This is excellent information and thanks for sharing it. What have  you 
learned about voltage regulation to the batteries? I understand  there has to 
be some sort of regulator to prevent overcharging and that  good regulators 
carry a pretty good price tag.
 
Dick Schmidt
Greenville, NC
Rush NoMore

--- On Wed, 4/14/10, Judith Blumhorst, DC  <[email protected]> wrote:



From:  Judith Blumhorst, DC <[email protected]>
Subject:  [IC27A] Re: Solar system [was: Inconvenient battery installation 
on  Catalina 27]
To: [email protected]:
Date: Wednesday,  April 14, 2010, 5:18 PM


 
 
 
Hi Tim (And David)
 
 
I have completed the first two courses for my solar designer  certification 
with NABCEP, the North American Board of Certified  Energy Practitioners.  
 
Let's see if I can help a little here....

 
 
Here's a real-world example, based on my homeport -- sunny  San francisco, 
at latitude 38 degrees.    A  high-quality 135w solar panel will replace 
about 30 usable  amphours per day to my high-quality batteries per day, if I  
have a high-efficiency solar charge controller.   
 
 
Where are you located?  How much sun you get determines how  much power 
your panels generate.   The rating on the solar  panel doesn't tell you what 
you're going to get in the real  world.   It's just an output rating in ideal  
conditions.  (And the definitions aren't always what you'd  expect). 
 

Good panels put out more juice than crummy ones when the sun  isn't 
perfect.  Efficient chargers constantly adjust the  "maximum power point" 
varying 
varying the resistance to the panel so  they put out the most usable amps at 
the right voltage.  Good  batteries have low internal resistance and can 
absorb a charge faster  and with less wasted energy.
 
With less than excellent components, you might get only half as  much 
usable amp-hours out of your system.

 
And your location makes a huge difference:
To size a solar system for a given geographical location and  climate, we 
use a concept called "peak sun hours"   
 
In san Francisco, we get the equivalent of 7.3 peak hours,  hitting a 
horizontally mounted panel.  In January, we get the  equivalent of 2.2 peak 
hours.  For the whole year, we get an  average of 4.7 peak hours per day 
 
And then we have to "de-rate" the performance for factors  like 
temperature, dust on the collector, electrical resistance,  etc.  An efficiency 
factor 
of .80-.85 would be excellent  performance in the real world.   .75 would be 
average.
 
Here are some good links to play around with...  
 
For peak sun hour factors by city and state in the US:
_http://rredc. nrel.gov/ solar/old_  data/nsrdb/ redbook/sum2/ state.html_ 
(http://rredc.nrel.gov/solar/old_data/nsrdb/redbook/sum2/state.html) 
 
For a solar system sizer (for off-the-grid systems)
_http://www.advancep ower.net/ advcalc.htm_ 
(http://www.advancepower.net/advcalc.htm) 
 
Fair winds,
Judy B,
  
____________________________________
 From: Tim Millar  <seascoutship76@ verizon.net>
To: ic...@yahoogroups.  com
Sent: Tue, April  13, 2010 1:20:19 PM
Subject: Re: [IC27A] Inconvenient  battery installation on Catalina 27


David,  


Got my answer from Coleman/Stearns Consumer Service:



The Coleman Solar Charging units are licensed products  manufactured and 
distributed by ICP Solar Technologies, 7075  Place Robert Joncas, Suite 131, 
Saint Laurent, Quebec H4M  2Z2, Phone: 888-427-7652 or 514-270-5770 Ext. 133, 
 _info-customers@ icpsolar.  com_ 
(http://us.mc450.mail.yahoo.com/mc/[email protected]) ,  
http://www.icpsolar .com. That's one 
possibility -  double battery, controller = about $140.
 (http://www.icpsolar.comthey/) 
 (http://www.icpsolar.comthey/) 
 Just searched eBay for "solar marine  battery charger" and don't know what 
I'm looking at. I'd leave it  hooked up in the cockpit on the mooring. We 
don't need much house  power - just lights, radio, bilge and fresh water pump 
- plus the  starter battery for Universal M-18.  Suggestions?
Tim


 
Even if the Coleman ones are end-of-life' d, there are a TON of  solar 
panels of all shapes, sizes, and wattage on eBay for  cheap. 
I had picked up a one-watt panel for about $6 (shipped, no less)  to 
trickle charge my car's battery during the week since I take public  transit to 
work. One watt is not much juice but I wanted to squeeze  more life out of my 
5-year-old battery and that was a cheap way to go  about it. Maybe next 
winter will be the death's door for  it...David

















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