cool setup..... what zone are you and how are the winters where you live.......i am going to start a setup myself.....and was worry about where to put the battrey bank....have cold winters here..i would like to put them out side but was think it is too cold for them..thanks
I'm on top of a mountain about 2 hours west of Washington DC. It gets pretty cold here, but there's not much weather that's below 0. My batteries are outside behind my workshop and i have a small roof over them, and 2 sides. The back side is my workshop, but there's plenty of room for air flow behind the sides. No front. They sometimes get wet when it rains, but i've had no problems so far.
Very nice setup, but stay away from marine deep cycle batteries, they are only good for 300 cycles=1 year if cycled every day. Real deep cycle/golf cart batteries will last 5+ years if maintained properly.
if you use a fan use a d/c fan its more eff. than a/c same with lights don't run lights off the inverter there is a lot of wasted power converting to a/c. rember the words of Tomas A Adison d/c power is more eff.
After using this set up for several months I'd say it's about right. My wife can run her stained glass grinder and a lamp, and I can run my mini drill press and charge my circular saw battery all at the same time without a problem. The 1750 also lets me run the fish pond pump too. One thing I can't do with the 1750 is use the variable speed control on my scroll saw - it just runs at full speed. To get the variable speed to work I have to switch over to the small clean power inverter.
I have two 25 watt LED lights inside, a halogen motion detector outdoor light, she runs a glass saw and grinder, I have a little hobby type press and a few other like tools, battery chargers for my portable drill and circular saw, bench lights, a small fan near the ceiling, and maybe a few other things. Of course everything isn't running at once, but sometimes near so. The 1750 seems to handle it fine. I had a small chest freezer running on it too once, but not enough solar.
Nice Setup you got there! Looks like you put alot of time into doing it right. Good Job with the Video also, Look forward to seeing what you may add in the future if you decide to expand the system.
Thanks for the comment Philipx2, but I don't really understand why it would matter. I have both positive terminals connected together, and bot negative terminals connected together. It seems I could tap power from anywhere on the connection and reach both batteries equally.
With both connections on one of the batteries it will work more than the other. Now it most likely will not effect the life of the battery as long as you don't drain them down often. I do think in your setup it really doesn't matter time will tell.
Your batteries are wired in parallel. I don't know what philipx2 is talking about. With batteries in parallel it doesn't matter where you connect to them, all wires being equal size.
Could you tell us where you bought the solar panels and what brand they are?
@therealvirginiawind Your fine hooked up like that, it eliminates a set of wires. Mine is the same and been in use for almost 2 years. Nice job on your system
Good going on your solar setup. You may want to swap you neg connection on your batteries. The way you have them set up the one battery you have with both wires will get worked more than one with out. Good luck.
really nice
themassinfluence 4 months ago
cool setup..... what zone are you and how are the winters where you live.......i am going to start a setup myself.....and was worry about where to put the battrey bank....have cold winters here..i would like to put them out side but was think it is too cold for them..thanks
pinetar100 11 months ago
@pinetar100
I'm on top of a mountain about 2 hours west of Washington DC. It gets pretty cold here, but there's not much weather that's below 0. My batteries are outside behind my workshop and i have a small roof over them, and 2 sides. The back side is my workshop, but there's plenty of room for air flow behind the sides. No front. They sometimes get wet when it rains, but i've had no problems so far.
Kent
therealvirginiawind 11 months ago
you onely need one breaker.
js111410 1 year ago
Very nice setup, but stay away from marine deep cycle batteries, they are only good for 300 cycles=1 year if cycled every day. Real deep cycle/golf cart batteries will last 5+ years if maintained properly.
Greetings from sunny Jamaica.
Lanny615 1 year ago
if you use a fan use a d/c fan its more eff. than a/c same with lights don't run lights off the inverter there is a lot of wasted power converting to a/c. rember the words of Tomas A Adison d/c power is more eff.
MrJetjoe 1 year ago
Do you think the 1750 was overkill or min? for what you are using it for?
gumby511 2 years ago
After using this set up for several months I'd say it's about right. My wife can run her stained glass grinder and a lamp, and I can run my mini drill press and charge my circular saw battery all at the same time without a problem. The 1750 also lets me run the fish pond pump too. One thing I can't do with the 1750 is use the variable speed control on my scroll saw - it just runs at full speed. To get the variable speed to work I have to switch over to the small clean power inverter.
therealvirginiawind 2 years ago
@gumby511
I have two 25 watt LED lights inside, a halogen motion detector outdoor light, she runs a glass saw and grinder, I have a little hobby type press and a few other like tools, battery chargers for my portable drill and circular saw, bench lights, a small fan near the ceiling, and maybe a few other things. Of course everything isn't running at once, but sometimes near so. The 1750 seems to handle it fine. I had a small chest freezer running on it too once, but not enough solar.
therealvirginiawind 11 months ago
Very nice!
I plan on building a solar powered shed just like that when I get into a house.
capnrob97 2 years ago
Nice Setup you got there! Looks like you put alot of time into doing it right. Good Job with the Video also, Look forward to seeing what you may add in the future if you decide to expand the system.
TatorMonster 2 years ago
Thanks for the comment Philipx2, but I don't really understand why it would matter. I have both positive terminals connected together, and bot negative terminals connected together. It seems I could tap power from anywhere on the connection and reach both batteries equally.
therealvirginiawind 2 years ago
With both connections on one of the batteries it will work more than the other. Now it most likely will not effect the life of the battery as long as you don't drain them down often. I do think in your setup it really doesn't matter time will tell.
philipx2 2 years ago
Your batteries are wired in parallel. I don't know what philipx2 is talking about. With batteries in parallel it doesn't matter where you connect to them, all wires being equal size.
Could you tell us where you bought the solar panels and what brand they are?
breezebro 2 years ago
you have them connected correctly
thimpsy 2 years ago
@therealvirginiawind Your fine hooked up like that, it eliminates a set of wires. Mine is the same and been in use for almost 2 years. Nice job on your system
hooptejoe 2 years ago
Good going on your solar setup. You may want to swap you neg connection on your batteries. The way you have them set up the one battery you have with both wires will get worked more than one with out. Good luck.
philipx2 2 years ago
Comment removed
philipx2 2 years ago
great video nice shed thanks for taking the time to make the video keep us updated.
michael970 2 years ago