My trawler already has 500w solar on aft hardtop. I have space for 1200w more on my flybridge hardtop (that I've been itching to fill).
I just installed 860ah of new lead acid gc batteries, but i have space to bump that up to 1075. On a Miami summer day, I estimate I could reasonably expect to capturre 800 amps @ 13volts (from 1700w). Way more power than I need for the usual stuff...which has me thinking about air conditioning.
Here's my idea for a summer routine. Run generator & a/c all night. Wake up in morning nice and cool with batteries fully charged. Turn off gen & a/c. With that much solar, even at 8am i will be pulling in a surplus over refrigeration & fan draws. Since I'm waking up cool I can then tolerate the heat for several hours.
Then around noon or so I turn on the a/c thru inverter. My aft cabin 10k btu claims 8-10amps, so just call that 100amps per hour @ 12v? With a 1075 ah bank, i should be able to run the a/c til 5 or 6pm. Then turn off a/c and hangout outside in the shade until bedtime, at which point i fire up the generator & a/c to run all night.
I'm trying to semi rationalize this economically. Figure over a 100 day summer, I'm saving 500-600 hours of generator. Call it $1/hr in fuel. So over 5 years I've saved $3k in fuel and 3000 gen hours. Plus additional savings captured during the other 9 months of the year, because I would literally never need to run the gen except to heat water for shower. Now i'm aware this will be at the cost of deeper cycles on the batteries (only during summer a/c use), but lead acid aren't that expensive in comparison to the fuel savings. Also it would likely require me to get a larger inverter. And of course buy the panels, multiple controllers, and wire. Still, it seems like i will be getting a brand new larger inverter and surplus of free energy (fall thru spring), completely subsidized by summer fuel savings.
Is anybody doing anything similar? Can anybody poke holes in my summer routine plan?
I just installed 860ah of new lead acid gc batteries, but i have space to bump that up to 1075. On a Miami summer day, I estimate I could reasonably expect to capturre 800 amps @ 13volts (from 1700w). Way more power than I need for the usual stuff...which has me thinking about air conditioning.
Here's my idea for a summer routine. Run generator & a/c all night. Wake up in morning nice and cool with batteries fully charged. Turn off gen & a/c. With that much solar, even at 8am i will be pulling in a surplus over refrigeration & fan draws. Since I'm waking up cool I can then tolerate the heat for several hours.
Then around noon or so I turn on the a/c thru inverter. My aft cabin 10k btu claims 8-10amps, so just call that 100amps per hour @ 12v? With a 1075 ah bank, i should be able to run the a/c til 5 or 6pm. Then turn off a/c and hangout outside in the shade until bedtime, at which point i fire up the generator & a/c to run all night.
I'm trying to semi rationalize this economically. Figure over a 100 day summer, I'm saving 500-600 hours of generator. Call it $1/hr in fuel. So over 5 years I've saved $3k in fuel and 3000 gen hours. Plus additional savings captured during the other 9 months of the year, because I would literally never need to run the gen except to heat water for shower. Now i'm aware this will be at the cost of deeper cycles on the batteries (only during summer a/c use), but lead acid aren't that expensive in comparison to the fuel savings. Also it would likely require me to get a larger inverter. And of course buy the panels, multiple controllers, and wire. Still, it seems like i will be getting a brand new larger inverter and surplus of free energy (fall thru spring), completely subsidized by summer fuel savings.
Is anybody doing anything similar? Can anybody poke holes in my summer routine plan?