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#16 | ||
Grand Sorcerer
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Join Date: Apr 2011
Device: pb360
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Quote:
Quote:
https://www.mobileread.com/forums/sh...d.php?t=213065 |
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#17 |
Still reading
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Karma: 103503445
Join Date: Jun 2017
Location: Ireland
Device: All 4 Kinds: epub eink, Kindle, android eink, NxtPaper
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Solar powered calculators still exist Now about €2. Uses a coin cell too which last about 5 to 10 years.
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#18 |
Well trained by Cats
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Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: The Central Coast of California
Device: Kobo Libra2,Kobo Aura2v1, K4NT(Fixed: New Bat.), Galaxy Tab A
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Solar cells have 2 measurable things (time is not one).
Volts and Amps (E*I=P) for a given exposure to sun. Time is a factor of Power (P) and the ability of the storage to accumulate. Try and force that (or fail to monitor and regulate) = FIRE. Be wary of cheap Power banks: 1) They skimped on the charge monitor and regulate. 2) The cells inside are not balanced (have same performance grade) 3) They are excessively discharging at a rate faster than the cells expect for good life. Many batteries spec Wh over an 8Hr rate. Faster provides less Wh. (the internal batteries may be at a higher or lower voltage and the output is buck-boost regulated to 5V (or spec) 4) They just lied about overall Wh capacity |
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#19 |
Custom User Title
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Location: Canada
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Would've been useful during the power outage. But I'm not sure how much use it'd be in Nova Scotia.
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#20 |
Wizard
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Device: PW3, Fire HD8 Gen7, Moto G7, Sansa Clip v2, Ruizu X26
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I have an inexpensive small (-ish) 2000 watt generator. But I realize that it is rated in Chinese watts. So I figure I actually have about a 1200 watt generator, with a brief peak capacity of 1500 watts.
Similarly, my power bank is advertised to charge my phone 4 times. The most I've pushed it to is 2 times, regardless of what the "capacity remaining" LED indicator lights say. Then I recharge the power bank. Once you have given in and resigned yourself to not expect the performance that the manufacture claims, you are disappointed less often. |
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#21 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Device: pb360
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A sales rep for high end workstations in the 80's liked to say that performance specs are "guaranteed not to exceed". (That is theoretical maximums unlikely to be approached in actual workloads.)
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#22 | |
Award-Winning Participant
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Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: NJ, USA
Device: Kindle
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Quote:
Many auto-darkening welding helmets have small solar panels that charge/back-up the coin cell batteries that power the auto-darkening filter. I assume the light of a welding arc is enough to provide sufficient power under normal conditions, as long as the batteries have any charge at all. Some popular cheap helmets don't have replaceable batteries, so even with the solar cell, they are claimed to only function for 6 years or so. Last edited by ApK; 02-24-2023 at 03:06 PM. |
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#23 | |
Award-Winning Participant
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Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: NJ, USA
Device: Kindle
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Quote:
I don't know if it has since changed, but when the solar craze started here in NJ some years back, it was also against the law to store the excess power, so no Tesla Powerwalls or anything like that, so you could not use your excess power for nights or cloudy days. It's like they were going out of their way to make it less practical. Last edited by ApK; 02-24-2023 at 03:08 PM. |
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#24 |
Still reading
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Location: Ireland
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I looked at Solar for the house recently and concluded it was pointless without about 40Ah of 48V batteries per panel. A per panel up converter (it's about 42V max on the panels) for each set of 4 off 12V car batteries (56V fully charged), then diode splitter/combiner for optional mains charging and industrial 48V to 220V AC 2000W inverter/UPS (about 44V to 56V operation) (as used in mobile phone bases, datacentres and telephone exchanges). Cheaper than a grid connected system selling excess to grid. Better value to use it yourself and not sell it. There would never be an overall excess with 6 off standard size panels. It's touch and go without a grant if it would pay back before the panels wear out.
Lead Acid batteries are cheaper than same amount of Lithium and the lead is 100% recycled to new batteries. Lithium only makes sense for portable gear and vehicles. The size and weight is no issue on a UPS or solar system. I'll wait and see if the grants are improved. Last edited by Quoth; 02-24-2023 at 05:04 PM. |
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#25 | |
Wizard
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Location: New England
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Quote:
Shari |
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#26 | |
Gentleman and scholar
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Location: Space City, Texas
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#27 |
Custom User Title
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#28 |
Onyx-maniac
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One of the real benefits of LiFePO4 is that they will accept whatever charge you throw at them. Lead-acid are happy to take a lot of current initially but will gradually slow down in accepting a charge. If you have a gray morning but then a sunny afternoon, the LiFePO4 will fully exploit the capacity of the solar system and fully charge while the lead-acid will slow down and end up not fully charged.
I'm using lead-acid now that are about five years old. I will replace them eventually with LiFePO4, but there is enough capacity so that I can put it off. The little orange dots (peaking at 12:45, local noon) show you the solar capacity. That the red line drops off sharply after 11:30 shows you that the lead-acid batteries are losing their appetite. They still want to soak up more electrons for another 6-8 hours, but if it clouds up, they lose. Yeah, we had some intermittent clouds yesterday. Last edited by Renate; 02-27-2023 at 07:33 AM. |
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#29 | |
Brash Fumbler
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Quote:
Last edited by Calenorn; 02-27-2023 at 08:15 AM. |
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#30 | |
Still reading
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Quote:
1) Depends on charging circuit re how Lead Acid charge. Also if nearly fully charged it doesn't matter. 2) "LiFePO4 is that they will accept whatever charge you throw at them." Totally untrue. Once they are charged there is zero charging. Lithium battery life is longer if not absolutely fully charged. The Lithium tech batteries are less recyclable, use more resources to make and fire / explosion risk is very high if charging HW or SW fail. Lead Acid much safer. If your batteries frequently get fully charged when loads of daylight left then: 1) If you don't run out of power in dark, you have more batteries and panels than you need. 2) If you do run out of power in the dark, then you need more batteries. Last edited by Quoth; 02-27-2023 at 10:27 AM. |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
make your ereader run on solar power | elemenoP | General Discussions | 55 | 11-20-2011 05:59 AM |
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