As I see it Jeff has used 20% of 460ah available which equals 92ah used so with a single 100ah he would have used 92% of the available 100ah therefore he would have been down to 8% as opposed to 80% Or am I looking at this all wrong?Morning Jeffmossy.
I stumbled accross this post whilst researching the very battery upon failure of my 3 off lead acids.
If you don't mind me asking if you have only ever used 20% of its charge capacity could you of not got away with a single 100ah model and saved significantly in both cash and weight?
I ask as I ponder if 460ah is excessive for our application and worth the investment.
Regards
Yes you are spot on Del, so in reality I could have actually got by with 1 100ah battery, but it would have been pushed to its limit and probably smoking . The excess power I have available will be my back up for the winter months when no solar is available, then I should be able to see its benefits before we go to Portugal, I am learning its limits as time goes onAs I see it Jeff has used 20% of 460ah available which equals 92ah used so with a single 100ah he would have used 92% of the available 100ah therefore he would have been down to 8% as opposed to 80% Or am I looking at this all wrong?
Regards,
Del
I wasn't trying to say that you would've got away with a 100ah I was saying exactly what you've said, 8% is low and you would need a a lot of sun to recover that 92% of discharge. I believe that you should have as much ah as you can fit and afford, the same goes for the solar array, but that's only my opinion.Yes you are spot on Del, so in reality I could have actually got by with 1 100ah battery, but it would have been pushed to its limit and probably smoking . The excess power I have available will be my back up for the winter months when no solar is available, then I should be able to see its benefits before we go to Portugal, I am learning its limits as time goes on
Probably different in Portugal as there is good sun even in Winter as I understand it, but solar is fairly inconsequential in the UK from Oct to March, and if 'off-griding' you need to be either moving a fair bit often or have a big battery plus access to hookup to give it a boost.
This is the state of charge of my 500Ah Battery Bank with 570W of PV Panels connected.
View attachment 64630
375Ah taken out the bank in the last fortnight with just solar to provide any replenishment. Probably plug in into EHU shortly and that should get me back to 100% by this evening (which is why having a powerful mains charger can be a significant benefit even if you hookup just once a week or once a fortnight).
View attachment 64631
Ill second that DelI wasn't trying to say that you would've got away with a 100ah I was saying exactly what you've said, 8% is low and you would need a a lot of sun to recover that 92% of discharge. I believe that you should have as much ah as you can fit and afford, the same goes for the solar array, but that's only my opinion.
Regards,
Del
50/60ahWhat is considred a large mains charger?
I thought gas fridges used very little gas, that being the big advantage, so cheap to run?Makes total sense.
I know Rugbyken has saved a lot of gas by running the the fridge off the battery, backed up by solar and an extra Lithium Battery. It is also nice to have the extra capacity so you don't have to watch the battery clock and compromise how you camp
Ref the Ferrari .... I found the 200BHP GT4 was relegated to a shopping car (and so OTT for that) after I bought a Motorbike which was even more fun and faster than the car (after selling the bike, ended up buying another fast Coupé a couple of years later )
Although if running an inverter more than 800-1000W is your intention you would probably have not managed to drive it from a single 100Ah battery anyway Jeff so point is moot, you needed biggerYes you are spot on Del, so in reality I could have actually got by with 1 100ah battery, but it would have been pushed to its limit and probably smoking . The excess power I have available will be my back up for the winter months when no solar is available, then I should be able to see its benefits before we go to Portugal, I am learning its limits as time goes on
I don't think the cost of running a gas fridge is the problem, I think that when you've invested large amounts of cash in lithium and solar you want to use as much "free" electric as possible I still run my three way fridge on gas 24/7 along with the hot water (and the heating now we've reached October ). I have a decent amount of solar and lithium but don't see the point of changing a perfectly good working three way fridge with a 12 volt compressor one, if it goes wrong then maybe that's the time to splash the cash? Just my thoughts and of course I'm not saying that I'm right or that 12 volt compressor fridges aren't any good, I believe that they are good but not for me at the moment anyway.I thought gas fridges used very little gas, that being the big advantage, so cheap to run?
I would never change anything for no reason either. I can understand powering from battery if you have an abundance of power you want to use but it wouldn’t stack up to get that power just for a 3 way.I don't think the cost of running a gas fridge is the problem, I think that when you've invested large amounts of cash in lithium and solar you want to use as much "free" electric as possible I still run my three way fridge on gas 24/7 along with the hot water (and the heating now we've reached October ). I have a decent amount of solar and lithium but don't see the point of changing a perfectly good working three way fridge with a 12 volt compressor one, if it goes wrong then maybe that's the time to splash the cash? Just my thoughts and of course I'm not saying that I'm right or that 12 volt compressor fridges aren't any good, I believe that they are good but not for me at the moment anyway.
Regards,
Del
When you price up the cost of a replacement fridge (like I did last year), the sums can point you in a certain direction .....I would never change anything for no reason either. I can understand powering from battery if you have an abundance of power you want to use but it wouldn’t stack up to get that power just for a 3 way.
My compressor fridge is absolutely wonderful but now getting to the time of year where powering it won’t be lol
That wasn’t ‘no reason’ David lolWhen you price up the cost of a replacement fridge (like I did last year), the sums can point you in a certain direction .....
3-way Fridge - £1200.
12V Compressor Fridge - £1200
240V Compressor Fridge - £400
A 3-way fridge is already wired up to use AC on hookup, so if you already have an Inverter, it is simple enough to adapt to run a 240V compressor fridge from that socket (A 12V Compressor will need cabling run from the Leisure battery to the fridge).
That £800 difference will pay for a fair bit of extra power