Solar Power Part 2

Sneakers

Just sneakin' around....
Sam's concerns over power usage prompted me to put the Kill-o-Watt meter on the clothes washer, a 20 year old Kenmore, just to see how much power it uses. Surprised how low the numbers really were. Max wattage was around 570w. Two long loads of bed sheets used about .25KWH. Easily within the capabilities of my solar generator, especially if I choose the 'quick wash' cycle. Cold water washes, so no hot water to consider.

Yeah, I know.... you all think I'm nutz. But that's ok, because I'm so well prepared that we will never have another major power outage again.

You're Welcome. :biggrin:
 

SamSpade

Well-Known Member
Sam's concerns over power usage prompted me to put the Kill-o-Watt meter on the clothes washer, a 20 year old Kenmore, just to see how much power it uses. Surprised how low the numbers really were. Max wattage was around 570w. Two long loads of bed sheets used about .25KWH. Easily within the capabilities of my solar generator, especially if I choose the 'quick wash' cycle. Cold water washes, so no hot water to consider.

Yeah, I know.... you all think I'm nutz. But that's ok, because I'm so well prepared that we will never have another major power outage again.

You're Welcome. :biggrin:
Thanks. The appliance whose usage surprised me the most? Fridge. And freezer. As long as it stays CLOSED, it doesn't use much energy.
 

Sneakers

Just sneakin' around....
Thanks. The appliance whose usage surprised me the most? Fridge. And freezer. As long as it stays CLOSED, it doesn't use much energy.
When I was playing with my original solar generator, I was really surprised at how little power a fridge uses, like less than 100w excluding initial surge. The power use adds up for auto-defrost and ice makers. A plain vanilla fridge uses practically nothing.
 

Clem72

Well-Known Member
Just noticed that 100 AHr LiFe batteries are down to about $300 now.
Are those 12v batteries? I figure I need about 50 KWH to run the house on an average day, maybe twice that if it's well below freezing. So I would need a bank of 45-90 of those to run my house for a day (14-28k). At that price I might as well buy an extra EV just to use as an emergency house battery.
 

Sneakers

Just sneakin' around....
For your consideration ...

Might apply here is well. Might want to check with your insurance company to be sure about things.


Aware. No panels mounted to the house, all portable.

At that price I might as well buy an extra EV just to use as an emergency house battery.
This is my long term plan. Use the EV in V2H (Vehicle to Home) mode. Solar panels charge the EV, the EV can power the house. 40Kw of battery. The gas genny either goes away or into long term storage.

Decent, reputable, warrantied LiFePO4 batteries are still expensive. I just paid about $1600 for a single 300Ah battery, so about $530/100Ah.
 

spr1975wshs

Mostly settled in...
Ad Free Experience
Patron
For your consideration ...

Might apply here is well. Might want to check with your insurance company to be sure about things.


I posted the video to our HOA's FB page, hoping someone would have better insight on Maryland. One of the members is a roofer who does mainly insurance jobs, and has worked in both states. He wrote that Maryland has less strict rules, and HOAs are more lenient here.
 

PeoplesElbow

Well-Known Member
Are those 12v batteries? I figure I need about 50 KWH to run the house on an average day, maybe twice that if it's well below freezing. So I would need a bank of 45-90 of those to run my house for a day (14-28k). At that price I might as well buy an extra EV just to use as an emergency house battery.
Some are, some are 24V.
 
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