Alaskan Sea-Duction said...
I wanted to start a discussion on solar panels versus wind generators. I am considering a setup for next year's cruise. I see mostly solar on power boats and wind on sail boats. Both have advantages and disadvantage.
I saw this wind generator (D400) and was very impressed. It was very quiet.
The D400 micro wind turbine
Why not both?
Modest solar setup for those long sunny days of summer with sporadic afternoon winds and a wind generator for those short winter days/long nights where the wind and rain can last for weeks.
That is the best compromise if one is wanting to avoid running a generator - usually why folk want to have solar or wind generation in the first place. And that, of course, comes back to how much power demand your boat needs, as Brian says. If you run Ac 120v or 240v stuff, then a good generator is still the best, but if like me, I have no AC on the anchor - only for batt charging & quick initial water heat at the berth, then using all 12v stuff, and converting as many lights to LED as possible makes good sense.
I have solar panels up on the aft part of the flybridge deck, where no-one needs to walk, and the Airbreeze wind Gen. It suffices for what we draw, but more panels would be needed if we ran more electrics.
That unit in your link Alaskan Sea-duction is a good unit. Better than what I have I think. And it is amazing just how good and quiet they can be in winds that are not all that strong. Certainly plenty of summer nights will also see charging happening, as well as during the day.
Just important to preferably have a decent MPPT typer controller, preferably designed to control both solar and wind gen. together, or otherwise they tend to get into fights, with one tending to shut the other down. Usually the solar panels win.