TwoHooter
Well-Known Member
We need to reduce our boating expenses of which the second biggest is marina fees. I am hopeful that I can obtain a nice sheltered swinging mooring which would save a lot of money even after paying an increased insurance premium. However the mooring is a 3 hour drive from home so the boat will have to be self-supporting most of the time. Here are my numbers:-
But what about the winter?
The mooring would be in a sheltered river on the south coast, latitude 50.3, where snow is a rare occurrence.
I have studied all the online calculators I can find and I distrust them. They all use the same algorithms so far as I can see and I think those algorithms are based on theoretical calculations not practical experiments. It's hard to use them to estimate how many kWh my proposed installation might actually produce in real life in two situations:
I'm hoping to use this information to estimate how often I might have to visit the boat to run the generator to make up for a shortfall in pv production during a typical winter.
I suppose a wind generator might be a useful adjunct. I haven't looked at those yet. Also it is possible to buy a system for auto-start of our generator but I can't find anyone who has actually installed one in the UK and I'm not willing to be a guinea pig for something so expensive, complex, and critical.
Thanks for reading.
EDIT - the proposed panels are 4No x 250W, not 500W
- Anticipated constant current consumption when boat is unattended 12V x 4A = 48 W per hour = 1.15 kWh per day. The reasons for the heavy constant current are that I run a remote monitoring and alarm system with cellular router and cameras always on, also our inverter/charger is 15 years old and I suspect may have a parasitic consumption greater than a more modern one.
- House bank 3No. x 12V x 255 Ah Lifeline AGMs (very expensive!) = 9.18 kWh
- Lowest permitted State of Charge to preserve battery cycle life = 50% = 4.59 kWh
- Therefore the batteries could run the boat unsupported for 4 days, before reaching 50% SoC
But what about the winter?
The mooring would be in a sheltered river on the south coast, latitude 50.3, where snow is a rare occurrence.
I have studied all the online calculators I can find and I distrust them. They all use the same algorithms so far as I can see and I think those algorithms are based on theoretical calculations not practical experiments. It's hard to use them to estimate how many kWh my proposed installation might actually produce in real life in two situations:
- an average English winter day
- a bad English winter's day
I'm hoping to use this information to estimate how often I might have to visit the boat to run the generator to make up for a shortfall in pv production during a typical winter.
I suppose a wind generator might be a useful adjunct. I haven't looked at those yet. Also it is possible to buy a system for auto-start of our generator but I can't find anyone who has actually installed one in the UK and I'm not willing to be a guinea pig for something so expensive, complex, and critical.
Thanks for reading.
EDIT - the proposed panels are 4No x 250W, not 500W
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