Member III
- 2,827
- First Name
- Jim
- Last Name
- covey sr
- Member #
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16986
- Ham/GMRS Callsign
- none - BREAKER BREAKER HAND HELD CB AND WALKIE TALKIE
Everything you say here confirms what I am learning today.I think you have a thouough knowledge on this subject. I will follow your advise. You covered a few things (bonus items) that were not mentioned in the videos etc. My away from home shore power is a 900 watt gas generator and battery charger if the solar cant keep up. Eventually I want my car charging system to handle the charging system when I am moving. The car already charges the Scamp trailer battery when driving. When parked I will have three batteries, 2 on the solar and possibly tied to the trailer battery as well . There will be times when I will not have the trailer and only have my vehicle due to bad road conditions. It will be disbursed camping and that is when I want solar power the most. Then I will need it for the ref. mostly for long stays off grid. Thanks for the excellent info and advise. LanlubberI am sure you can find a nice diagram on how to set things up but the basics are:
1-2 Batteries
Solar Controller to charge batteries
Solar Panel of your choice (100 watt or better would be my recommendation)
A Fuseblock (Bluesea for example) to connect USB plugs, and anything else 12 volt
Inverter direct to the battery (Should have a fuse)
Bonus items (On off switch to turn everything completely off) OR
Battery switch that allows you to get power from battery 1 or battery 2, or both. (Blue Sea Systems 300 Amp m-Series Battery Switches)
Shore power so you can plug in and charge batteries at home (Noco brand work well)
In the Southwest I think 2 batteries are overkill because solar works so well. I have a 95ah starter/deep cycle battery in my FJ and another 95ah deep cycle in my trailer. My 100 watt panel can keep both happy while camping in a matter of hours. I manually switch my fridge to be powered off of the trailer battery when I am base camping.