This Fred will second the other Fred. My engineering team designed a solar system for 4 repeater stations for a pipeline communications system in S. Africa. It was hugely overdesigned, we had to to meet the contract specs. In full sun, it made over 200A, way more than the wet glass batteries needed or could handle, and we had to have a controller that would sink all that power. 90 mins later, it was down to 110A, and 60 min later it was down to 60A which just about shouldered the site load.

Be careful in your plans. For a field operation, it's great, and it works well. I was visiting my college roommate while they were building a straw bale house, and one morning, there was no generator noise. Turned out they had a solar trailer [I have a photo if anyone is interested], it was bright and sunny, they could move the trailer, and it seemed to power their skill saws and drills.

73,

Fred K6DGW
- Northern California Contest Club
- CU in the 2013 Cal QSO Party 5-6 Oct 2013
- www.cqp.org

On 4/18/2013 8:39 PM, Fred Townsend wrote:
Jim:
Be careful what you ask for. Solar arrays are not rated for average.
Probably because there is no such thing as an average sun. I'd like to say
they are rated for peak power but that is somewhat illusionary too. How much
power you actually get from an array depends on many things. You will want
to get some sort of charge controller for sure. That is so you can match the
charging requirements of your rig and battery to the array. DO NOT expect
them to be the same without a controller.

______________________________________________________________
Elecraft mailing list
Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft
Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm
Post: mailto:Elecraft@mailman.qth.net

This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net
Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html

Reply via email to