Nathan England wrote: > All, > > I live in a travel trailer full time and move from place to place. I always > hook up to power at the camp ground / trailer park and have never needed to > use my batteries unless the power goes out, which in northern AZ is quite > often. > > Anyway, I want to start using my batteries more and not paying APS for > electric, so I am looking into solar generation or a gas generator to > supplement. But I am completely ignorant of the way power works or what > amp/hours means and all that. Definitions: Amp/Hour : Power delivered at one ampere for one hour. If your trailer has a typical load of 30 amperes, then a 90 amp/hour battery will power it for roughly three hours before running out. Inverter : A device that transforms DC power (usually from a battery) to AC power. Volt-Ampere (VA) : A simple measure of AC power. AC power is not calculated as Volts*Amps the way DC is, it's a more complex equation due to RMS equations, multi-phase power, etc... VA is a simpler proxy for the single-phase power equation. Battery : A chemical generator. Batteries do not store energy, they store chemicals that can generate electricity. Rechargeable batteries use a reaction that may be reversed in-place by application of a reverse-biased electric field. Solar Photovoltaic (PV): the use of semiconducting materials to generate electricity directly from light. Most current commercial materials are 8-12% efficiency, and may generate around 1500 watts under full sun, which works out to around 5 kwh/day(about 20% of typical household use) year-round average (for a 3X5 meter roof-mounted unit costing around $15,000 installed). > > I have two 12volt deep cycle batteries, what do I need to charge them and how > long could it take to charge them? To charge your batteries and use them for primary power as well you would need a power management unit (available with most solar and generator systems, at an extra cost). The time to charge depends on: 1) how much power can the batteries produce fully charged 2) how efficient is the recharge process (typically around 30%) 3) how much power do you have to dedicate to charging the batteries Keep in mind that even deep-cycle batteries have a limited number of charge/discharge cycles, usually around 500-1000, depending on chemistry, so you have to factor in replacing them every 2-3 years if used for primary power. > > I know I could ask this on an RV forum, but being a tech junkie, and you all > as well, I'm assuming someone will know some tricks so I could possibly build > something myself... Possibly creating an interface to my computer to > monitor/control any of this. It's fine to write a software interface to a purchased power management unit (most have well-defined control interfaces), but don't even think about building your own power management unit, since the unit has to handle household power circuits, and a small mistake could easily cause fire or electrocution. > > nathan --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss