Ahmet,
Thanks for giving us the specs. I think 1000 sqft is a reasonable amount of land to water, I still have to ask though, how do you plan to irrigate? Little center pivot sprinklers are the easiest and least expensive option, but they require a healthy pressure and are terribly wasteful of water. On the other hand, drip irrigation requires less pressure (but make no mistake—they do need a minimum pressure to work) and they are very very efficient in terms of water useage. I have used drip line irrigation before and it is quite nice, I simply lay a drip line where I want the water and then I bury with soil, woodchips, straw—basically anything to keep sunlight off the tube to make it last longer (as in 5+years. Mine are over a decade old and work just fine). Center pivot can, depending on circumstances, waste up to 50% of the water to evaporation (much while airborne!) and wind drift. Drip irrigation wastes nothing. Not one single drop. I think by now you know my opinion.
Back to the electrical. So now we have some useful information but we need some more. You have a 700 watt pump. That gives us a basic spec. Is the pump 120v ac electric? If so then we need some equipment to convert your 12v dc supply to 120v ac. Each of those changes will cost you around 10%, so figure at least 20% reduction from your battery supply. BTW, your choice of an gel battery is an excellent choice. Those batteries are durable, capable of deep discharge and are generally extremely reliable—everything that a car battery is not. If we are talking about how many batteries you will need, I would personally recommend starting out with two, wired in parallel. Again, assuming we are talking about 100ah batteries, this should give you an hour with time/charge to spare.
Another seemingly random question, where are you located? What is your climate? This is pertinent to setting up solar panels. Your latitude determines the most advantageous angle to set your solar panels. Your climate, specifically heat and really especially your humidity play a role in how much water that you need. I should also add here that your soil level is equally important. Clay soils, once soaked, will hold on to water quite well. Sand on the other hand dries out only slightly less than spraying water into the air.
Back in the day when I really used drip lines, I used a pressure compensating 1/2 inch (12mm) line with water emitters spaced 1’ (30 cm) apart and they used 1/2 gallon per hour. This worked well for me as I have clay soil. I would typically run the drip line for 1 hour and my clay soil held on well. If you go the drip line route, you will have to decide how much drip line you need. If we assume that 1/2 of your garden is walkways that don’t need water, then we have 500 sqft. Using the tubings I mentioned above, a 100’ line will water about 100 sqft pretty well, but soil, temperature and humidity all play important roles. But if we go with this figure, then to water 500 sqft, you will need 500 ft of drip line. BTW, I am referencing pressure compensating drip line, meaning that ALL the emitters release the exact same amount of water regardless of changes in height, and the first and last emitters are likewise equal.
But again, going back to the above example (you adjust as necessary), 500 sqft could be 5 100 ft long lines. That is 500 emitters each yielding 1/2 gallon/hour or a total of 250 gallons per hour. I don’t know the output of your pump, but I bet it can handle this load.
Using this thought experiment, we can then begin to make some basic calculations and estimate your basic electrical loads. Assuming you use the current pump, a 700 watt pump running for 1 hour will need 700 watt hours of electricity. A single 100ah battery, assuming a 20% loss for changing ac to dc and 12v to 120v yields up 800 watt hours which gives you just over an hour of run time. But I would still go with 2 SLA/gel batteries as even deep cycle batteries will lose some charge as they get deep into their cycle. Further, 1 hr run time might not be
enough and I assume that you want some flexibility. Also, 2 batteries are a pretty simple setup.
So there you have the battery electrical side of things. I don’t know what exactly you have in mind for solar panels but this at least gives you a start.
BTW, I used drip line from a company called dripworks.com. They have every conceivable type of tube, connection, timer or accessory that you could possibly want. There are other companies and they might be great too, but I only have 1st hand
experience with dripworks and I can highly recommend their products. They are very high quality at very reasonable prices.
Ahmet, this has been a long post and I hope this is helpful. If you let me know about your latitude, climate, soil, etc we can further refine this project.
Let me know if this helps,
Eric