Matching battery's, panels, and charger to my inverter
j4ray
Registered Users Posts: 13 ✭✭
Ok so I bought a aims power 6000w 24v inverter for an off the grid small cabin/house. I'm in the middle of the build and don't want to do things twice. I've been researching and researching on what and how to match everything else to that inverter. I have 6 100w renogy panels to start with and just got a 40amp mppt charger. I'm having second thoughts about the charger, maybe I could get another one and run them parallel(if I do that will they have to be synced)? Because I started looking at the amount of battery's I will need to make it work. Also still not sure what size and how many battery's. Or what size charger I need.
Please help me
Thank you
Please help me
Thank you
Comments
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It's also for everyday use
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Welcome to the forum.
The purpose of the system is to provide for your electrical needs... in other words, your loads.
When designing a system we need to know what are we designing it for, in other words, your loads.
It's very similar to buying a pickup truck... if you asked my advice on what truck to buy, I would ask the weight of your load and the weight of your trailer.
After you tell us about your loads, we can choose a battery size that can handle the load. The final step is to buy enough solar panels and controllers to charge the battery.
By the way, we need the peak load in watts, and the daily energy use in kilowatthours.
--vtMaps
4 X 235watt Samsung, Midnite ePanel, Outback VFX3524 FM60 & mate, 4 Interstate L16, trimetric, Honda eu2000i -
Also solar power systems are "expensive"... If you are building a cabin, your best bet may be to continue with a genset for powering your tools. And have a smaller solar power system for evenings/night time lighting/radio/cell phone charging/etc.
If you design a system to power your air compressor+saws+etc. for construction--It may be "too large" for your daily needs when construction is completed.
What is your system design? Type of batteries, Amp*Hour rating of the battery bank (or how many batteries, and voltage/Amp*Hour rating of each battery)?
A 6,000 Watt AC inverter on a 24 volt battery bank is a bit of miss-match... That is a lot of current to pull from a 24 volt battery bank.
-Bill
Near San Francisco California: 3.5kWatt Grid Tied Solar power system+small backup genset -
The building is complete, so construction is no longer a plroblem. So pretty much small a/c unit 12000btu. Led lights, 2 flat screens, 1/2hp water pump, refrigerator, and other little stuff not to much more. Everything else is gas.I don't know how to convert all of that in watts. Was looking at some 200ah battery's, maybe 2-4 of those.
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j4ray said:The building is complete, so construction is no longer a plroblem. So pretty much small a/c unit 12000btu. Led lights, 2 flat screens, 1/2hp water pump, refrigerator, and other little stuff not to much more. Everything else is gas.I don't know how to convert all of that in watts. Was looking at some 200ah battery's, maybe 2-4 of those.
Will there be any laundry machines, clothes dryers, hair dryers, microwaves, laser printers, or irons?
--vtMaps
4 X 235watt Samsung, Midnite ePanel, Outback VFX3524 FM60 & mate, 4 Interstate L16, trimetric, Honda eu2000i -
I will do a really quick (nominal) design for a quick 3,300 WH (3.3 kWH) per day system--Good enough for most of your stuff, except A/C--Which could double the system capacity if done "wrong" (lots of discussion about A/C to make sure you have an efficient design and good hardware).
For A/C, if you only use it during hot summer afternoons (lots of sun), you might get away with a smaller system (running system all day and into the night is a real power draw).
But, before I do that, can you let me know (very roughly, nearest major city) your cabin is located. I would use something like this (look at list of cities) to figure out how much sun per day you have, by season.
http://solarelectricityhandbook.com/solar-irradiance.html
-Bill
Near San Francisco California: 3.5kWatt Grid Tied Solar power system+small backup genset -
The closest city to me is Lafayette La facing directly south. And yes I forgot about the washer. My dryer is gas. No to the hair dryer and microwave iron or printer. I was planning on getting a mini split a/c and only running it during the day. But I haven't bought it yet. I was kinda putting it off. Maybe you might have a suggestion? Oh and it's 500 square foot thank y'all
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j4ray said:I was planning on getting a mini split a/c and only running it during the day. But I haven't bought it yet. I was kinda putting it off. Maybe you might have a suggestion? Oh and it's 500 square foot thank y'all
By the way, where will your batteries be kept? Hopefully in a cool place.
--vtMaps
4 X 235watt Samsung, Midnite ePanel, Outback VFX3524 FM60 & mate, 4 Interstate L16, trimetric, Honda eu2000i -
That was my plan. Having the a/c run at my peak power during the day I'd have it on a timer. My parents have a cabin similar to mine, but run on the grid. They're a/c runs maybe 3 hours total during the day and comes on once at night. Oh also my inverter is 120/240vac so maybe that helps with the mini split? and the pump is 120vac. The battery's will be kept inside my laundry room. It's an outdoor type laundry room connected to my cabin, it will be well ventilated. No direct sunlight. No moisture.
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OK. It's all about numbers now. We use formulas to design a system and formulas need numbers. Give me your overnight consumption in kwh and I will give you a battery size and array size. The array will be sized to charge the battery AND power the a/c.
--vtMaps
4 X 235watt Samsung, Midnite ePanel, Outback VFX3524 FM60 & mate, 4 Interstate L16, trimetric, Honda eu2000i -
So I'm not sure if I've got this right but I'm guessing 2.3kwh. Really not sure though
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Ok, lets go through the numbers... A very efficient off grid home (full size energy star fridge, well pump, led lighting, washing machine, computer, etc.) around 3,300 kWH per day in Lafayette La. For the moment, lets assume that you may use 2-3 kWH per day for A/C during the day/late afternoon (direct from solar, not so much from batteries in the summer months) and see what happens.
Battery bank--Assume 2 days of storage and 50% maximum discharge (typical "optimum" off grid system & for maximum battery life), 48 volts (larger system if you bump up system size for more A/C loading later).- 3,300 WH per day * 1/0.85 AC inverter eff * 2 days storage * 1/0.50 max discharge * 1/48 volt bank = 324 AH @ 48 volt battery bank
- 324 Ah * 59 volts charging * 1/0.77 panel+controller deratings * 0.05 rate of charge = 1,241 Watt array minimum
- 324 Ah * 59 volts charging * 1/0.77 panel+controller deratings * 0.10 rate of charge = 2,483 Watt array nominal
- 324 Ah * 59 volts charging * 1/0.77 panel+controller deratings * 0.13 rate of charge = 3,227 Watt "typical cost effective" maximum
http://solarelectricityhandbook.com/solar-irradiance.htmlLafayette
Measured in kWh/m2/day onto a solar panel set at a 60° angle from vertical:
Average Solar Insolation figures
(For best year-round performance)
Use November as the "break even" month for 3.3 kWH per day:Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun 3.40
3.93
4.75
5.22
5.34
5.06
Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec 5.14
5.10
5.01
4.83
4.01
3.53
- 3,300 WH per day * 1/0.52 off grid system eff * 1/4.01 hours of sun per day = 1,583 Watt array for "Nov" break even month
- Jan: 3,227 Watt array * 0.52 AC system eff * 3.40 hours of sun per day = 5,705 Watt*Hours per day (typical January)
- Nov: 3,227 Watt array * 0.52 AC system eff * 4.01 hours of sun per day = 6,880 WH per day (typical November)
- Summer: 3,227 Watt array * 0.52 AC system eff * 5.0 hours of sun per day = 8,390 WH per day (min-typical summer)
- 8.4 kWH summer capacity - 3.3 kWH night time loads = 5.1 kWH per day available for "day time" A/C (minimum)
-Bill
Near San Francisco California: 3.5kWatt Grid Tied Solar power system+small backup genset -
So I need to get a 48 volt inverter? Or is there any way it can work with the 24 volt I have now? Also would it be better to get a dc mini split or is that even an option?
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j4ray said:So I need to get a 48 volt inverter? Or is there any way it can work with the 24 volt I have now?
Also, consider that you don't really know what your needs are... you will be in much better position to expand the system at 48 volts.
One more thing... you haven't mentioned how far the panels are from the charge controller. Longer distances work better with a 48 volt system.
--vtMaps
4 X 235watt Samsung, Midnite ePanel, Outback VFX3524 FM60 & mate, 4 Interstate L16, trimetric, Honda eu2000i -
there should be no more than 30 ft of wire between panels and chargers. And at the most 10ft of wire from chargers to battery's. What size wire should I use from panel bank to charger, is 10awg ok? Running 4 battery's in series/parallel to get 24volts is a bad idea? When you say single sting of battery's, you mean 2 battery's in series to get 648ah? I just want to make sure I'm understanding. I had my eyes on a 12v 200ah solar power mighty max battery, is this a good or bad brand?
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Would 4 vmax 225ah 6 volt be a better option?
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Don't get too much into wiring issues at this point--We have to settle on loads, array size, and lengths (note, you want to keep charger and inverter wiring very short/heavy--10 feet may be a bit on the long size for your system).
Note that Power = Voltage * Current... So if you choose a 24 volt battery bank, the current is 2x higher.
For example, lets say you have 8 batteries: 6 volt @ 225 AH "golf cart" batteries. You can arrange them as:- 4x 6 volt batteries in series = 24 volt string; 2x parallel strings for 24 volt @ 450 AH battery bank
- 8x 6 volt batteries in series = 48 volt string @ 225 AH battery bank
- 24 volts * 450 AH = 10,800 Watt*Hours
- 48 volts * 225 AH = 10,800 Watt*Hours
- 24 volt bank: 450 AH * 0.10 = 45 amps charging
- 48 volt bank: 225 AH * 0.10 = 22.5 amps charging
This is bit in the "weeds" where you are at in the process right now. We still do not know how much power/energy you need to "be happy". Normally, we would start with your loads and figure out your daily loads, then size the rest of the system.
If, however, you have other limits (most people do not have an unlimited bank account)--Perhaps you only want to spend $xxx money on batteries at this time--We can use that and size the system based on the limited amount of batteries. And if you need more power, you can use your genset (to power saws, fill a cistern once a week with a genset, etc.).
Note refrigerators and well pumps can make a system "much larger". And add A/C, that can make the system even larger.
We just need to figure out what your needs/limits are, and then size the system to mee those needs.
-Bill
Near San Francisco California: 3.5kWatt Grid Tied Solar power system+small backup genset -
So did a home wattage calculator. Peak running 4900w continuous (that's everything running all at one time). That wouldn't happen much and only on the weekend
2200w continuous during the day while I am at work. That's with the a/c on. 600w continuwith the a/c off.
So im guessing 4.9kwh peak, 2.2kwh daily, 0.6kwh daily with out the a/c on.
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So 4.9kwh is a lot. But I will never be running the a/c, clothes washer, and dryer all at one time. The most I would do is washer and dryer at once if needed. That would put me at 3.4kWh peak rarely. And only during the day. So let's go with that 3.4kwh
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- 4x 6 volt @ 225 AH batteries series = 24 volt string @ 225 AH
- 2 strings in parallel = 24 volt @ 450 AH (8 batteries total)
- 8 x 6 volt @ 225 AH batteries in series = 48 volts @ 225 AH
Just that 24 volts take 2x current (heavier wiring, heavier charge controllers, etc.)...- 450 AH battery bank (24 volt) * 0.10 rate of charge = 45 amps
- 225 AH battery bank (48 volts) * 0.10 rate of charge = 22.5 amps
Near San Francisco California: 3.5kWatt Grid Tied Solar power system+small backup genset -
So the 48 volt system looks like the best way to go. But I have to much invested in this inverter I have now. I have to do with the 24 volt set up. Will 450ah be enough for my needs?
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450 AH @ 24 vdc battery bank is really only good for around 2,400 to, maybe, 3-4,000 Watts maximum. A 6kW inverter is pretty big/oversized for that bank.
Is your inverter TSW our MSW? What is its taste load (power usage just turned on)?
If the inverter is a MSW unit and/or uses >>20 Watts tare, you may want to think about a different inverter.
It all depends on your energy needs, or you adapt your energy usage to what you can afford. And maybe 2-5 years in the future, you revisit your setup.
1kWh power day=led lighting, rv water pump, laptop, radio, cellphone, internet.
3.3 kWH power above + fridge + well pump + washer + a few fans (near normal electrical life with lots of energy conservation).
Power usage is a highly personal set of choices. My suggestions as a starting point are just suggestions. What works for me or others may or may not work for you.
-BillNear San Francisco California: 3.5kWatt Grid Tied Solar power system+small backup genset -
AIMS Power (PICOGLF60W24V240VS) 6000W 24V DC to 120/240V AC Pure Sine Inverter Charger
- 6000 Watt continuous pure sine power
- 18000 watt peak power for 20s
- Built in 85A smart battery charger with 7 selectable battery type settings
- Auto gen start feature
- Marine and industrial grade
i have no idea if it is tsw or msw. -
True Sine Wave = Pure Sine Wave
So yours is a PSW/TSW type inverter--Better for running all of your AC loads (MSW--Modified Square Wave can cause issues for some devices/loads).
Just an FYI--Many folks here have had less than ideal function/reliability with AIMs inverters--Others have been pretty happy. (I will offer no opinion other than some of the much more expensive/better brands of inverters do tend to be more reliable).
A 6,000 Watt inverter with 18,000 Watt surge draws a lot of current at 24 volts:- 6,000 Watts * 1/0.85 inverter eff * 1/21 volts cutoff = 336 Amps (max load, minimum input voltage to inverter)
- 18,000 Watts * 1/0.85 inverter eff * 1/21 volts cutoff =1,008 Amps (max surge load)
I would suggest ~2,400 to perhaps 4,000 Watts as the maximum AC inverter for a 24 volt battery bank with "reasonable size" wiring and lead acid batteries.
Not to say you cannot do more--But I would not suggest it unless you are willing to experiment to confirm you get 6/18kWatts from the inverter.
-Bill
Near San Francisco California: 3.5kWatt Grid Tied Solar power system+small backup genset - 6,000 Watts * 1/0.85 inverter eff * 1/21 volts cutoff = 336 Amps (max load, minimum input voltage to inverter)
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