Do you have an example of stealth solar?
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@smallsolar I've a little 10W panel on the shed roof. It used to keep a Pi running, now it powers a humidity sensor to control a dehumidifier.

@dtl How incredibly cute and also useful! @smallsolar
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@smallsolar mounting is relatively easy. Half of them are already mounted to a pair of 2x4s that we can use as a stand - we have plenty of space to lay them out.
The obvious place to put the energy is our EV but that’s out during the day when it’s sunny. I think the solution (for us) would be to use the RV as a buffer (it has 5kWh of lithium batteries) during the day, then “empty” that into the EV each evening.
My math says that’s about $0.80 worth per day on average in summer.
@matt I regularly have to remind myself that an EV uses up so much power to move! Sadly even with a few kW of panels it takes a while to charge a car up.
$0.80/day will slowly add up!
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@matt I regularly have to remind myself that an EV uses up so much power to move! Sadly even with a few kW of panels it takes a while to charge a car up.
$0.80/day will slowly add up!
@smallsolar right, but it doesn’t need to fully charge the EV, just absorb what the solar panels have produced that day so it doesn’t go to waste.
The challenge is that $0.80/day over the course of the summer is only going to be around $150 so I need to avoid spending too much to make this happen else I lose my savings.
For context, we’re mid-build on a custom all-electric Passive House in Vermont and plan to add solar / batteries to it in future so this would only be short term
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@matt I regularly have to remind myself that an EV uses up so much power to move! Sadly even with a few kW of panels it takes a while to charge a car up.
$0.80/day will slowly add up!
@matt thinking about it perhaps plug in solar (if allowed in your area) would work best, just need to invest in a inverter and the it would just contribute to your energy when there is sun, almost leave it and let it work.
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@matt thinking about it perhaps plug in solar (if allowed in your area) would work best, just need to invest in a inverter and the it would just contribute to your energy when there is sun, almost leave it and let it work.
@smallsolar I’m not sure about plug in solar around here. If I were prepared to invest the time (and probably some money on interconnects), moving the 5kWh of LiFePO4 batteries, 3kVA inverter and charge controller out of our RV would be the best route. Just don’t know if the savings would justify the cost / hassle.
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I recently added an ecoflow stream battery to my house (properly with a fused spur and isolator as plug in isn't yet allowed) and it gives me 4x MPPT so I can position 4 panels in different positions even if they aren't optimum and generate some solar.
I suspect I'll end up putting 2 on my garage in a traditional setup and then 2 directly on an east facing wall of my house which can't be seen by anyone. I'll probably mount the wall ones myself, still debating the garage ones as it's a slate roof which is a bit tricky to work with.
@smallsolar I have something similar and from that very brand, and I’ve written about it here
Guillaume Rossolini (@GuillaumeRossolini@infosec.exchange)
Attached: 1 image I’ve been experimenting with my newish solar battery Represented here is the end of the charge cycle yesterday at about the same time the sun started to set I’ve been powering the freezer with this 2 kWh battery, and every morning there is ~50% charge left, and so far every day I get it up to 90% (by choice) from solar alone I can also do a load of laundry or two, and some vacuuming, without being even connected to the grid (if I get the timing right) Of course this is clear summer weather, so this won’t be the same all year (This is far from sufficient to power the entire house, it’s just an experiment) Essentially, 1-2 kWh that aren’t drawn from the grid on a daily basis #solar
Infosec Exchange (infosec.exchange)
I’m not plugging the panels in a wall outlet and I’m not connecting them to the grid. This is just a temporary setup in an isolated circuit.
The panels are in the garden, connected to the battery which is located inside the house; the inverter is in storage, I don’t need it since there is no connection to the grid and it’d be draining the battery faster
The washing machine is usually plugged into the battery
I have one cable leading from the battery to my office to power stuffs when there is enough sunlight that day, and I’ll often switch everything back to the wall outlet or to the battery depending on weather conditions
Another cable is extended on demand when I need vacuuming done
As soon as the sun starts typically shining enough of the day, which is right about now, I extend another cable to the living room for the TV and whatnot, but that’s a tough one for my tiny setup to absorb, so there’s a lot of plugging and unplugging daily for that one

I stopped trying to power the freezer with the same panels, I tried that last year but it was stressful
Every night, I tell the battery to stop powering everything; every morning, I tell it to enable the output again
Still, I’m getting a lot from just two panels and a small battery

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@smallsolar I have something similar and from that very brand, and I’ve written about it here
Guillaume Rossolini (@GuillaumeRossolini@infosec.exchange)
Attached: 1 image I’ve been experimenting with my newish solar battery Represented here is the end of the charge cycle yesterday at about the same time the sun started to set I’ve been powering the freezer with this 2 kWh battery, and every morning there is ~50% charge left, and so far every day I get it up to 90% (by choice) from solar alone I can also do a load of laundry or two, and some vacuuming, without being even connected to the grid (if I get the timing right) Of course this is clear summer weather, so this won’t be the same all year (This is far from sufficient to power the entire house, it’s just an experiment) Essentially, 1-2 kWh that aren’t drawn from the grid on a daily basis #solar
Infosec Exchange (infosec.exchange)
I’m not plugging the panels in a wall outlet and I’m not connecting them to the grid. This is just a temporary setup in an isolated circuit.
The panels are in the garden, connected to the battery which is located inside the house; the inverter is in storage, I don’t need it since there is no connection to the grid and it’d be draining the battery faster
The washing machine is usually plugged into the battery
I have one cable leading from the battery to my office to power stuffs when there is enough sunlight that day, and I’ll often switch everything back to the wall outlet or to the battery depending on weather conditions
Another cable is extended on demand when I need vacuuming done
As soon as the sun starts typically shining enough of the day, which is right about now, I extend another cable to the living room for the TV and whatnot, but that’s a tough one for my tiny setup to absorb, so there’s a lot of plugging and unplugging daily for that one

I stopped trying to power the freezer with the same panels, I tried that last year but it was stressful
Every night, I tell the battery to stop powering everything; every morning, I tell it to enable the output again
Still, I’m getting a lot from just two panels and a small battery

@smallsolar this isn’t a good financial move btw
The setup cost a little over a thousand € and I’m saving 1, maybe 2 kWh per day
That’s €0.14 per day
so I guess I’m saving about €50 per year? -
@smallsolar In some flats where balcony solar isn't allowed because the landlord is a bastard, people have been building solar tables, which is just a panel with four legs. There is no rule against having a table on your balcony and no rule what a table has to be made of. You'll probably find many pictures if you search for "solartisch".
They can be used as table as well (best use a table cloth to avoid scratching the glass, although it is pretty tough).
@yngmar @smallsolar built one of those a few years ago. The hardest part was to find a suitable panel in terms of "small but extra thick frame for maximum sturdyness". 200W panel, 300W inverter limited (to stay below the legal limit for overall power fed into the grid). I opted for cheap surplus/scratched steel legs mounted with excess 19" rack mounting screws. I used rubbery plastic spacers to help with the bending force applied to the panel frame. The panel has protective plastic covers on the corners. If drilling holes into the frame, put a cloth and a piece of wood anside to not hit the plastic surface with the tip of the drill. I used two aluminum rails to mount the inverter. As those inverters are potted I just removed four screws that hold on the cover and replaced them with slightly longer ones that go though holes on the aluminum profiles.


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Do you have an example of stealth solar?
I've been thinking a lot about 'stealth solar' where people attach #solarpanels to places in a subtle way to capture the sun's energy. It might be stealth as there are strict rules or just want to keep it low key. #balconysolar is sort of stealth gone mainstream.
With cheaper MPPT devices you can now accept slightly poorer efficiency due to placement and with microinverters don't need to make long strings. I particularly think that there is no point having a solar panel in storage, best get it out there and generating even if it's in a temporary place!
So I thought I'd start a small website that documents different stealth setups, so if you have cheeky solar panels and would be willing to share a little info (but not too much if it would get you in trouble) get in touch.
@smallsolar
Yesterday Robinson Meyer of Heatmap posted a video of him being interviewed by Chris Hayes that had a clip of a dude who installed PV in his backyard which connects to his EV charger, so no permits needed at all. -
@smallsolar In some flats where balcony solar isn't allowed because the landlord is a bastard, people have been building solar tables, which is just a panel with four legs. There is no rule against having a table on your balcony and no rule what a table has to be made of. You'll probably find many pictures if you search for "solartisch".
They can be used as table as well (best use a table cloth to avoid scratching the glass, although it is pretty tough).
@yngmar @smallsolar If you're renting, how do you get the power into the system? Or do you just power batteries/specific items off the panel?
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Do you have an example of stealth solar?
I've been thinking a lot about 'stealth solar' where people attach #solarpanels to places in a subtle way to capture the sun's energy. It might be stealth as there are strict rules or just want to keep it low key. #balconysolar is sort of stealth gone mainstream.
With cheaper MPPT devices you can now accept slightly poorer efficiency due to placement and with microinverters don't need to make long strings. I particularly think that there is no point having a solar panel in storage, best get it out there and generating even if it's in a temporary place!
So I thought I'd start a small website that documents different stealth setups, so if you have cheeky solar panels and would be willing to share a little info (but not too much if it would get you in trouble) get in touch.
@smallsolar Captain's Quarters II BBS runs off four 100W solar panels with 2 Jackery Power Station 300's powering a Mac Mini!
http://cqbbs.ddns.net -
R relay@relay.mycrowd.ca shared this topic
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@yngmar @smallsolar If you're renting, how do you get the power into the system? Or do you just power batteries/specific items off the panel?
@anyGould @smallsolar You plug it in a wall outlet, which becomes a wall inlet. This is safe as the inverter will shut off when losing the grid.
There's a EU directive or something about it. Here in Lithuania it's up to 800W and the paper registration is minimal. This does not involve the landlord, only the power company

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@Remittancegirl @smallsolar It's perfect for exactly what I use it for.
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@smallsolar this isn’t a good financial move btw
The setup cost a little over a thousand € and I’m saving 1, maybe 2 kWh per day
That’s €0.14 per day
so I guess I’m saving about €50 per year?@GuillaumeRossolini @smallsolar that's a twenty year payback... Assuming power starts the same price, the time goes down as prices go up. Maybe call it fifteen years on the conservative side?
It's not hugely profitable, but it's not the worst investment in the world.
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@GuillaumeRossolini @smallsolar that's a twenty year payback... Assuming power starts the same price, the time goes down as prices go up. Maybe call it fifteen years on the conservative side?
It's not hugely profitable, but it's not the worst investment in the world.
@mu oh no, these big names, easy-to-install batteries, are absolutely a bad investment (as far as money saving is concerned)
Payback would probably take 20 years at the rate I mentioned, but this battery is unlikely to survive that long; in fact, in one year it has already lost half its capacity

These branded batteries are not the way to financial savings, but they are easy to setup and they do provide a nice buffer for unpredictable energy loads that you don’t want the grid to take on
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@mu oh no, these big names, easy-to-install batteries, are absolutely a bad investment (as far as money saving is concerned)
Payback would probably take 20 years at the rate I mentioned, but this battery is unlikely to survive that long; in fact, in one year it has already lost half its capacity

These branded batteries are not the way to financial savings, but they are easy to setup and they do provide a nice buffer for unpredictable energy loads that you don’t want the grid to take on
@GuillaumeRossolini @mu I think we have to move away from hoping that everything will pay for itself, part of this is to change the way we use energy and the way we source it. There is a rebellion in each of these steps, each time you use your panel you are taking back a little bit of agency.
The 'green' revolution we all want isn't going to pay for itself but we've got to do something!
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@mu oh no, these big names, easy-to-install batteries, are absolutely a bad investment (as far as money saving is concerned)
Payback would probably take 20 years at the rate I mentioned, but this battery is unlikely to survive that long; in fact, in one year it has already lost half its capacity

These branded batteries are not the way to financial savings, but they are easy to setup and they do provide a nice buffer for unpredictable energy loads that you don’t want the grid to take on
@mu in my case, being conservative that’s less than 400 kWh per year, and that’s less than 1/30th of my energy needs
So all in all I know this is not very relevant, compared to heating (and cooking to a lesser extent), but we do what we can
️My view on this is, these systems at least allow us to avoid sudden, high, unpredictable loads from the grid, like for example washing machines and vacuuming.
The grid can’t predict that the population will likely vacuum their place at xyz time every day and therefore there’s an increased energy need at that time every day.
Of course, the conundrum is that they’ve been doing that regardless, and my changing habits now might be worse for them
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@yngmar @smallsolar built one of those a few years ago. The hardest part was to find a suitable panel in terms of "small but extra thick frame for maximum sturdyness". 200W panel, 300W inverter limited (to stay below the legal limit for overall power fed into the grid). I opted for cheap surplus/scratched steel legs mounted with excess 19" rack mounting screws. I used rubbery plastic spacers to help with the bending force applied to the panel frame. The panel has protective plastic covers on the corners. If drilling holes into the frame, put a cloth and a piece of wood anside to not hit the plastic surface with the tip of the drill. I used two aluminum rails to mount the inverter. As those inverters are potted I just removed four screws that hold on the cover and replaced them with slightly longer ones that go though holes on the aluminum profiles.


@stereo4x4 @yngmar that looks awesome and super practical! Would it be okay if I used your image on my site as an example?
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@smallsolar Captain's Quarters II BBS runs off four 100W solar panels with 2 Jackery Power Station 300's powering a Mac Mini!
http://cqbbs.ddns.net@byteknight amazing! I run the solarcene.community mastodon instance on something similar
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Do you have an example of stealth solar?
I've been thinking a lot about 'stealth solar' where people attach #solarpanels to places in a subtle way to capture the sun's energy. It might be stealth as there are strict rules or just want to keep it low key. #balconysolar is sort of stealth gone mainstream.
With cheaper MPPT devices you can now accept slightly poorer efficiency due to placement and with microinverters don't need to make long strings. I particularly think that there is no point having a solar panel in storage, best get it out there and generating even if it's in a temporary place!
So I thought I'd start a small website that documents different stealth setups, so if you have cheeky solar panels and would be willing to share a little info (but not too much if it would get you in trouble) get in touch.
@smallsolar Here's my backyard garbage can solar setup. These are two 100 watt panels which charge a 280 Ah LiFePO4 battery in my basement, no grid-tie. Once we get out of the winter months this produces more than enough energy to run my washing machine, among other things.
I've got various other panels kicking around, but this is my 'main' system for which a better mount is on the list of projects.
