FERENZA
Free Member
- Messages
- 261
THanks, a lot better, ( lem sips )/ that would be Chris who asked, we always have a Sunday drink when I am upHi Eric,
you scarpered before we had chance to say tara, hope you are feeling better. Your mate who you were supposed to meet in the pub was worried about you when you didn't show up.
Noticed your Rutland as you disappeared, is the pole telescopic? If not you certainly need to be mindful of overhead obstacles.
will send picsYes that would be fine ... as long as you get them the right way round.
I used a 504 for a long time.
when I tested at the time it was 13.8 I think if it is same wind speed per hour.? but peeks and troughsWas that 13amps per hour, day or weekend please? I always liked the idea when I saw Rae do it but it didn’t seem to give enough fir my application.
Oooooh, that would be good for me, may have to look again when I get some spare pennies. You have any pics of your setup?when I tested at the time it was 13.8 I think if it is same wind speed per hour.? but peeks and troughs
Agree with paulhelenwilko (#12)
IF I were to use our MoHo in Winter...I would definitely get one
After sept 21 less than 12 hours daylight and even more limited useful sunlight for solar (sun too low etc)
Even say 3 amps for say 14 hours overnight = 42AH
Or enough to keep the Truma heating running without depleting the battery
Yes Daylight solar gives a faster top up but 42AH is very very handy !
I assume you just need to be careful if it is likely to be very windy overnight !
I could believe 13.8V but 13.8A x 12V = 165 Watts is 2 times the quoted capacity.I`m struggling to work out how a Rutland 504 rated at approx 80 watts can put out 13 + amps
Is the " 13.8 " quoted in post #8 by the OP volts ?