I have always wanted to do a super insulated house design that had a large 
central masonry mass or floor slab with heat tubing that you could cool in the 
summer during the nighttime and solar heat in the winter with solar. Or an 
earth tube air duct system that you could pull cool night air through that 
would cool the slab. I built a Passive Annual Heat Storage home 16 years ago 
that kept the house at 68 F during the summer in western Washington. I was very 
comfortable. Any thoughts ?

 

Thanks -

 

Dana Orzel

 

Great Solar Works, Inc

www.solarwork.com

E - [EMAIL PROTECTED]

V - 970.626.5253

F - 970.626.4140

C - 970.209.4076

 

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Tom Elliot
Sent: Wednesday, August 20, 2008 3:57 PM
To: RE-wrenches
Subject: Re: [RE-wrenches] offgrid system question

 

Thank you Jeff, for asking the obvious.  I've been agog that no one seemed to 
think this was a nutty situation for an off-grid home.

 

T.

 

 

----- Original Message ----- 

From: Jeff Yago <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>  

To: RE-wrenches <mailto:[email protected]>  

Sent: Wednesday, August 20, 2008 10:57 AM

Subject: Re: [RE-wrenches] offgrid system question

 

I may be out of line here, but most of these comments have been related to 
making the right program settings and startup surge current issues.  I did not 
read any comments that this client is nuts to try and run a 3.5 ton air 
conditioner from a solar off-grid system, let alone a system with such a very 
small capacity.  

 

I would be surprised if this small existing solar array and batteries can keep 
up with the regular loads like lights, kitchen appliances, refrigerators, and 
entertainment equipment, let alone also running a central air conditioner.  .   

 

I would not  just debate the problems of surge current, I would like to know 
how this little solar system is going to keep up with the constant load of 
approx. 4,000 watts for the AC unit plus another 500 watts for the air handling 
unit which he did not mention.  With a constant drain of 4,500 watts, just how 
long do you think this battery bank will last?   For most locations, during 
peak summer days a typical AC unit needs to run constantly 12 to 16 hours per 
day.   

 

I would be interested in hearing from others on this, but here in the humid and 
hot east it is not possible to provide air conditioning for an off-grid home 
unless we are just cooling one or two rooms with a low energy Sanyo type split 
system in the 1/2 to 3/4 ton range.  Of course if you have enough solar modules 
and batteries you could run anything, but can you afford it?

 

We do lots of off-grid systems and the first thing we tell clients is to not 
even think about having air conditioning, electric hot water heaters, or 
electric clothes dryers unless they have a really big bag of money.

 

Jeff Yago


 


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