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| This is a discussion on Off Subject. Solar for my house. within the Local Prius Club Main Forum forums, part of the Local Clubs category; Originally Posted by V8Cobrakid i agree.. i kinda addressed this.. it's either wood (bbq, bonfire, or wood stove) or propane. ... |
Off Subject. Solar for my house.
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| | #31 | |
| Senior Member Join Date: Sep 2006 Location: Sunnyvale, California
Posts: 783
My Car: 2006 Prius Model: Package: #8 Thanks: 33
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Friends: 0 | Quote:
As for cooking, how about preparing most cooked meals in a solar oven? When solar isn't available, then use a wood stove. As a last resort, haul out the Coleman propane stove. Or with that 10KW array, you could use a microwave. Here are a few solar ovens from The Solar Cooking Archive . Note particularly the first two pictures which are the same oven - it is an outdoor box, but accessible from inside the kitchen. | |
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| | #32 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jun 2004 Location: s.f. bay area
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My Car: 2004 Prius Model: N/A Package: #9 Thanks: 10
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Friends: 5 | solar cooking. Awesome! I'll definitely give that a try. so easy to create too. I'm still hoping to use our Prius or Lexus as a backup. we have a small generator too.. but it is gas. |
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| | #33 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jun 2004 Location: s.f. bay area
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My Car: 2004 Prius Model: N/A Package: #9 Thanks: 10
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Friends: 5 | is there any way to get a longer life out of the batteries? different style batteries? I'm thinking a really large and extremely expensive prius battery system. keep the voltage regulated (normal use and prius plugged in) but would i be too limited on my usage? |
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| | #34 |
| Tree-hugging Vegan Witch Join Date: May 2007 Location: Grays Harbor, WA, USA
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Friends: 71 | Um, why would you drink water from the hot water tap? Ewwww. I don't do that, anyway. Only your hot water is going to run through the heating system, not the cold drinking water. |
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| | #35 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jun 2004 Location: s.f. bay area
Posts: 2,946
My Car: 2004 Prius Model: N/A Package: #9 Thanks: 10
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Friends: 5 | we may have to skip radiant heat all together. i don't want to go electric ( even though it may be easier and better for this small house) and i don't have the room to use water under the floors. the basic frame and floor height is already set. I'll type more later. the poison oak on my fingers is driving me nuts |
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| | #36 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jun 2004 Location: s.f. bay area
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My Car: 2004 Prius Model: N/A Package: #9 Thanks: 10
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Friends: 5 | Solar Electric Modules - NEW 70 Watt Panels @$2.84/Watt! anyone else feel this is a pretty good deal? |
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| | #37 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jun 2004 Location: s.f. bay area
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My Car: 2004 Prius Model: N/A Package: #9 Thanks: 10
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Friends: 5 | i was hoping for a higher wattage per panel.. but.. o well. this will limit the panal array to the carrying capacity of each inverter. |
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| | #38 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Apr 2004 Location: Great Central Valley, Fresno, CA
Posts: 1,227
My Car: 2007 Prius Model: Package: #6 Touring Thanks: 9
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Friends: 2 | First and foremost: it is more cost effective to hold onto what you already have vs. "go get more." Emphasize conservation first - triple pane windows, R-100 ceiling insulation (rigid foil-face foam, not fiberglass), on-demand water heaters (not stand-by gas), caulk every crack, add storm liners to curtains. The pay back will be faster and you will feel better about the decisions you make. Spend time on the Rocky Mountain Institute site: Rocky Mountain Institute : Abundance By Design. There is video streaming and specific guidelines by category (energy, heating, cooling, water, etc.). RMI emphasizes that you or a building never do one thing, but should be designed to serve multiple purposes (and receive multiple benefits).
__________________ Touring 2007 Silver AM w/ 6-CD, Sirius satellite - J MUIR Trek 5200 & Trek 2300, Scanguage II Least cost, end use vs. least cost, first use |
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| | #39 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Sep 2006 Location: Sunnyvale, California
Posts: 783
My Car: 2006 Prius Model: Package: #8 Thanks: 33
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Friends: 0 | Have you chosen an inverter yet? You want one with PPT (Power Point Tracking) and the battery voltage that you've chosen. If it's an Outback 48 volt unit, then you would use 2 panels in series per string, with as many strings as it takes to reach the maximum power capacity of the inverter. Thin film panels initially put out maybe 20% extra power, but after 6 months they settle into the rated power. I think the Outback units can down regulate the extra power to a safe level (non-PPT units can't - they'll just fry!). At 70 watts per panel, you're going to have an awful lot of wiring to do. And the building code is going to require fused combiner boxes to combine all those strings into the number of strings that the inverter can handle. At 4 miles from city hall, you're going to need permits, and you'll have to follow code to pass the inspections. The price seems reasonable for unknown brand thin film without any guarantee. Without metal frames, you'll have to figure out some way to mount them. All the mounting systems I know of assume a metal frame that can be clamped down. Maybe the seller knows more about how to mount the particular units. You've really got to choose the inverter and battery voltage before you choose the panels. Panels come in a wide variety of voltages, and they don't all work with all inverters. Grid-tie inverters that use high voltage (~600) strings can utilize a wide variety of panels. Inverters that support battery usage are much more restricted in panel configurations. Unless someone has come out with a high voltage battery unit in the 7 years since I really checked out the market. Could happen, but not very likely since off-grid is such a small market. The explosive growth is all in batteryless grid-tie. |
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