"Study books and observe nature; if they do not agree, throw away the books." ~ William A. Albrecht
Nothing is foolproof to a sufficiently patient fool!
I hate people who use big words just to make themselves look perspicacious.
At my age, Happy Hour is a nap.
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Be Content. And work for more time, not money. Money is inconsequential.
Iterations are fine, we don't have to be perfect
My 2nd Location:Florida HardinessZone:10 AHS:10 GDD:8500 Rainfall:2in/mth winter, 8in/mth summer, Soil:Sand pH8 Flat
Some places need to be wild
Bill Haynes wrote:
So...
While Solar is a lousy investment over much of the country, enough solar to run freezers, fridges, and water pumps, would be a minimal investment.
Especially if you convert a chest freezers, to refrigeration duty, and install a large storage tank, a (tiny) solar pump can fill all day.
John F Dean wrote:I am a huge believer in redundancy. I have solar and a gas generator. I also have a spillway off z large pond that flows 9 months of the year. If you go for the generator consider a dual fuel gas/lp generator. Lp does not go bad, but it is pricey. The good news is that methane can be produced on the homestead and run an lp generator.
At my age, Happy Hour is a nap.
Bill Haynes wrote: While Solar is a lousy investment over much of the country, enough solar to run freezers, fridges, and water pumps, would be a minimal investment. Especially if you convert a chest freezers to refrigeration duty.
Blog: 5 Acres & A Dream
Books: Kikobian Books | Permies Digital Market
Leigh Tate wrote:
Bill Haynes wrote: While Solar is a lousy investment over much of the country, enough solar to run freezers, fridges, and water pumps, would be a minimal investment. Especially if you convert a chest freezers to refrigeration duty.
That's exactly what we did. We have solar powering a chest freezer and converted chest freezer>fridge. We have three 345-watt panels, a 705-AH battery bank (wish it was larger, but that's what we could manage), and a 1000-watt pure sine wave inverter. The whole thing cost us about $2500. That was for everything including charge controller, cables, vent fan, grounding rods and wires, circuit breakers, temp sensor, etc. Considering we live in the southeast with extremely hot summers, the ability to preserve food through freezing and refrigeration makes the system priceless.
Some places need to be wild
Frank Spezzano wrote:Thanks, Leigh. Seems to be enough "emergency solar" supporters that I need to reconsider. We know you're a serious researcher from reading your book. Loved it.
Eric Hanson wrote:Given all that—solar panels, inverter generator and over 700 ah battery bank with all associated hardware and wiring, I think you did pretty well at only $2500. When I have peeked around, I likely would have spent more.
Blog: 5 Acres & A Dream
Books: Kikobian Books | Permies Digital Market
S Bengi wrote:A 2000W, pure sine wave/inverter generator would be like a regular outlet and could power anything.
Some places need to be wild
Iterations are fine, we don't have to be perfect
My 2nd Location:Florida HardinessZone:10 AHS:10 GDD:8500 Rainfall:2in/mth winter, 8in/mth summer, Soil:Sand pH8 Flat
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