That little adapter at 6:30 is something I never considered. Thanks for this, it really opened my eyes.
@Eric1Tube
Жыл бұрын
I didn't have any issue when I did a test and ran the full 3000W thru that adapter fed by the one yellow heavy duty 10 gauge extension cord. It didn't get warm or anything, but in theory each 120v outlet is only rated for about half that. So, I replaced that adapter with this one that allows me to run dual extension cords from the inverter into that generator port and safely doubles the amount of power I can pull out of the inverter: www.parkworld.us/61926-p613.html
@SuperVstech
Жыл бұрын
Great cheap setup. Plenty of room for improvement. Automotive battery cables use steel ends which waste energy, and can corrode in moist environments. Windynation and plenty of other sources for copper, and tinned copper crimp on ends, with weather tight shrink wrap ends. I like to use a crimp point tool, but there are hydraulic and hammer/vice crimpers. Glad you upgraded to 24V, that will let you produce better amp to watt ratio. With all the panels you have, 48v is even more efficient, but then you need to invest in class T fuses, and special high voltage dc switches. Will Prowse’s diy solar forum is fantastic for routing out issues to prevent problems from cropping up. Still, a great system so far!
@disposablefiendnuxmu
Жыл бұрын
Sickest Movable Home Setup I Have Seen so far!
@Nemo_IRL
Жыл бұрын
I have that exact same cart from Harbor Freight with Tesla modules on the bottom shelf. I put it together at the beginning of 2019 and it's still going strong. I live in hurricane country and sometimes work in other states so I needed something portable. 👍👍
@occamraiser
Жыл бұрын
I'm jealous I live in the UK and the power NEVER goes off for more than ten minutes. I'd love to have an excuse to hook my inverter and generator into the house's power distribution board but it's just not worth the cost of paying an electrician to set up for a situation that never happens.
@BruceForster-k9n
Жыл бұрын
@@occamraiser .....Until your Electric Bill goes so high that you cannot pay it! OR, your government decides to start doing Rolling Blackouts. NEVER SAY NEVER!
@jeremycatches9766
Жыл бұрын
The no. one thing that improves the efficiency for the cheapest is sun tracking. So many people don't consider how much more energy you can get from a tracking panel.
@toolhead147
Жыл бұрын
I like your solar setup. I had a smaller system for about 4 years until my golf cart batteries died. I'm planning on upgrading to something similar to yours.
@shawnr771
Жыл бұрын
Well done description.
@occamraiser
Жыл бұрын
10KWh - nice system :) It is so nice to see useful levels of standby power. most youtubers talk about 500wh power banks and a couple of hundred watt Panels as if they are the solution to your energy needs if the power goes off to your home. My (hobby) backup system is about 4KWh, but I have a generator too - which I know is the real solution if there is a long term power cut, I'd use the batteries for while the generator is cooling since it can't be refueled when hot.
@Eric1Tube
Жыл бұрын
Yeah, I like our generator because when the electric company had a planned outage for some kind of maintenance in our area a few weeks ago, it was summer and I wanted to use the air conditioner so I used the generator which does run essentially the whole house and air conditioner. The rest of the year, my solar system does fine. I did a test by turning on most of the major house lights (some in every room) and had the furnace and big TV running as well as the refrigerators, freezers and aquariums. The house was only drawing about 1350 watts, well within the capability of the solar system. I was pleasantly surprised. That would not have been possible with incandescent light bulbs a few years ago. It's really only the A/C and electric dryer that it can't power. Of course, things like the microwave and hair dryers which use around 1500 watts each can also be used but need to be used judiciously. I kept our evaporative cooler when we installed the A/C a few years ago as a backup in case the A/C malfunctioned. I haven't tested it but I believe the solar system will power the evaporative cooler as well.
@helloworldmain
Жыл бұрын
This is a great system and well put together.
@miken7629
Жыл бұрын
Like how you put the wheels on those panels. I have a big panel that is hard by to move by myself so will copy that idea.
@Eric1Tube
Жыл бұрын
The arrays are still pretty big and heavy and require 2 people to move around. If I were to do it again, I would have made the arrays smaller with only 4 panels per array to make it user friendly for one person.
@mikenotsue
Жыл бұрын
The wooden hooks are a French cleat. Just throwing that out. Nice setup!
@Electronzap
Жыл бұрын
Very nice, I really like that system.
@Syncere20
Жыл бұрын
That's a very nice solar setup.
@HUNTEDGHOSTPRODUCTIONS
Жыл бұрын
need a smaller version like this for a mini van
@kevinroberts781
Жыл бұрын
Sweet setup! Very similar to what I made! We need to get us an all in one system! Maybe some of these inverters that backfeed the house too.
@ThePatriotPirate
Жыл бұрын
Nice setup!
@Eric1Tube
Жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@mattue84
Жыл бұрын
Nice set up! I think yopu could of save money, time just upgrading a few things to combine solar panels, charge controllers and a few other things
@gnuorder
2 жыл бұрын
Cool setup but why did you go with the Harbor Freight panels instead of getting 7 more panels matching your neighbors? I imagine that would be cheaper and you would only need two arrays for 2400 watts and only need two charge controllers too.
@Eric1Tube
2 жыл бұрын
The system is good but not ideal due to the fact that I started out with a much smaller system in mind and the scope gradually increased over more than a year as I'd buy a couple of panels here and a couple more there whenever I noticed them on sale. Same situation applies for the charge controllers. Current price for a 6-pack of 330 Watt panels like mine is $1854. So about a dollar a watt which is about what I paid for my panels.
@adairjanney7109
Жыл бұрын
that is awesome I need to make the same for power outages
@Code_hack_
2 жыл бұрын
Very cool system. Great ideas! Thanks for sharing
@lifeongps
Жыл бұрын
When the grid goes down, pray for sun!
@Eric1Tube
Жыл бұрын
It's not feasible for most people to be 100% prepared for all contingencies. Even the largest solar systems with battery backups are vulnerable after a certain number of overcast days. Originally, my main electrical backup was a generator which will work on cloudy days. But will fuel be available? Now, solar is my primary and the generator my secondary backup, but certain times of the year, we could definitely be out of luck.
@lifeongps
Жыл бұрын
@@Eric1Tube Oh good points. In general, I am against solar for anything more than charging your cell phone as technology is limited. If the grid goes down, we have chaos. My training and prep efforts tell me to be mobile. Not to stay in a fixed location or all you will be doing is defending your property for survival. The solar station you have built will be stolen. Now if you do this for everyday use, save some money, etc, then great job!
@richardrowland7044
Жыл бұрын
nice creative build
@lulu_your_girl
Жыл бұрын
Wow nice setup 👍
@SamCarleton
Жыл бұрын
Im wondering about your MPPT’s…. I have Victron Energy MPPT’s and they have two different ratings, the input voltage (Voc) & watts as one of the ratings and the output current as the second. So my Victron Energy MPPT 150/35 allows for 150v @ 500 watts input and max out at 35 amps to charge the batteries. I looked up the specs on your MPPT, all I could find was the Voc of 100v @ 520 watts. I’m guessing the 40 is the output amps, not the input amps. Out of curiosity, how do you have each array wired? All in parallel or 2p3s ( 2 parallel arrays of 3 in series)? If they are all in parallel, try wiring one up as 2p3s and see if it produces more then the 6p setup. Higher voltage is always your friend in this case. The main reason is resistance. You will loose a lot more electricity running high current with low voltage than low current with high voltage. This is the reason my deployable solar system is the 150v not the 100v, I can use smaller gauge wire over longer distance with less lose of power!
@Eric1Tube
Жыл бұрын
You are correct, the MPPTs display the output going into the batteries. I compliment you for figuring that out. The way the panels are connected is 3 pairs in each array connected in parallel. Each panel outputs about 17.5v and 6 amps so the array voltage is about 35v and 12 amps. The controllers are charging a 12 volt battery bank, so they lower that voltage and push out about 38 amps which is the same number of amps that one of the arrays would output if if was connected entirely in parallel. A number of people have concluded that I had the panels all in parallel because the charge controllers displayed about 38 amps going into the batteries. The truth is, that would be the value pretty much regardless of how the panels were wired. I may post some video I shot where I had one array in series, one array in hybrid series-parallel and one array in parallel. For each of those wiring schemes, in this small system, the charge controllers were all putting out about the same amount of amps into the batteries.
@MrWascally
Жыл бұрын
good vid like that it's separate units easy to scale for diff apps wood hangy thing on cart? u basically made a french cleat as i,ve heard it called
@Eric1Tube
Жыл бұрын
Hmm, French cleat. I never heard of that before but now I've learned something new. Thanks.
@MrWascally
Жыл бұрын
@@Eric1Tube heard a int designer use the term made em for their big wall art , pics, .. even fancy upholstered head boards ,.. sometimes 45 the two pcs where it will lay flat against a wall/flat surface took their word for it seemed like a fancy word for a pretty basic practical thing
@lukbar7780
Жыл бұрын
Good job . 👏
@Crftbt
Жыл бұрын
Curious if you've considered using aluminum instead of wood for the solar panel structures to bring down the weight.
@Eric1Tube
Жыл бұрын
I didn't think about it. Part of the decision to go with the treated 2x4s was to improve weather resistance but also to allow the panels to be slightly recessed within the array frames so the arrays could be stacked without scratching the surface of the panels.
@deanhenthorn1890
Жыл бұрын
I’m considering getting the same thing as you. Not concerned with powering the 240v items. Is there a switch that can be installed to allow only utility or only solar to be chosen? I see the breaker panel lockout feature, but was wondering about a switch.
@Eric1Tube
Жыл бұрын
So following a 2 day power outage about 3 years ago, my next door neighbor and I both decided to install a generator port on our houses. I went with the configuration you see in the video where the generator (or solar power system) are connected to a couple of breakers on the panel. My neighbor went the other direction which was to put a seperate switch box where his house connects to the grid. So he does have a big external switch to go from grid to generator. I switch it in the panel. Coincidentally, we also have the same type of generator.
@evil17
Жыл бұрын
Not a bad setup, I would at least hook it up to ur light circuit & maybe a GPO circuit with a change over switch so you can use a bit more of that power & have redundancy if solar or grid have problems. TFS. Cheers
@Eric1Tube
Жыл бұрын
At some point when I get around to making the necessary wiring changes, my intent is to deploy one or two arrays permanently to power our TV room which has the freezer, a second refrigerator, the big aquarium and the TV/home theater. Our electric bill was already less than $100 a month so I wasn't really worried about using the system full time.
@smurfdoggy
Жыл бұрын
I'd like to see the electrical diagrams for this setup.
@penncapt
Жыл бұрын
What do those selector switches do?
@Eric1Tube
Жыл бұрын
@@penncapt Switch 1 is a momentary contact doorbell button and feeds power from the batteries and thru a resistor into the inverter to charge the inverter capacitors before really providing power to the inverter. This eliminates any sparking and erosion of terminals in the main switch when the batteries are connected to the inverter. Switch 2 provides battery power to the inverter. Switch 3 provides battery power to the charge controllers and also allows the charge controllers to charge the batteries. Switches 4 and 5 connect the solar panels to the charge controllers. For proper operation, they need to be switch in the correct numerical sequence.
@mandy2tomtube
Жыл бұрын
I built a very similar system using the Trojan solar lead acid batteries wound up with also 10 K use an outback charge controller and the fuses for the battery and for the solar panels and a 2200W pure sine wave inverter. I used it for about six years before I moved, it was a good learning experience, but it upwards of a seven year return on investment it ran my refrigerator every day Internet computers. All else ran from the grid mine was isolated from the grid to be legal I would always be better to buy a prebuilt professionally designed system. My intention was to learn for myself, in the future I would pay a professional if there was anyway I could afford it and now there’s two things of government could get behind affordable, housing and solar for everyone I also have the same problem. No way to pump the excess into the grid because it was completely isolated from the grid and I conclusion was if I were to do it again I would want 48 V not 12 and at least double the battery capacity and of course lead acids are cheap but you have to water them can only use 50% of the capacity you can’t get them hot or cold even if you do everything perfectly right they only last about eight years although I did not get a test that they were working perfectly at the end of five years
@Eric1Tube
Жыл бұрын
My intent was to put together a system that would get us by during an outage and have it all paid for immediately. I didn't want to spend tens of thousands for a professional system. It wasn't high enough priority. Still, now that I have some personal experience, it is likely that I will have a bigger better system in coming years. I may or may not do most of the work myself.
@junkvista61
Жыл бұрын
Good job man! Would you please share your list of materials, with links, so I can copy it.
@mobileplayers5008
Жыл бұрын
I would just use it as solar daily activities. Why used as backup?
@Eric1Tube
Жыл бұрын
Because my electric bill was already less than $100 on average so it wasn't really that important to me. My siblings in Arizona have electric bills in the multi hundreds of dollars. But, at some point when I get around to making the necessary wiring changes, my intent is to deploy one or two arrays permanently to power our TV room which has the freezer, a second refrigerator, the big aquarium and the TV/home theater.
@retrorevival5237
Жыл бұрын
Love the video. I got a setup with one of these Mppt controller's. How are you wiring all four? Is it all just wired to the battery's? Looking at adding another string of panels and another Renogy 40amp but like you've done. I have Autism so bare with me bud
@Eric1Tube
Жыл бұрын
Yes, you can connect multiple MPPT charge controllers (in parallel) to the same battery bank. On the other hand, you should not connect MPPTs in parallel to the same panel array. In my system, each controller is connected to a separate array.
@johnhanley2431
Жыл бұрын
Your design is very cool and will be one of the cheapest methods to get 10 KWH of backup power. I would add one item. A large battery charger connected to your generator. That way you can charge the batteries on poor solar days and not run the generator at night. Something like the EG4 100A charger. For your aquariums, I have not had good luck with my pumps and lights running off a generator. The power quality causes them to fail. What are you using to power the house?
@Eric1Tube
Жыл бұрын
The inverter shown powers the most of the house along with the aquariums. I did a test by turning on most of the major house lights (some in every room) and had the furnace and big TV running as well as the refrigerators, freezers and aquariums. The house was only drawing about 1350 watts, well within the capability of the solar system. I was pleasantly surprised. That would not have been possible with incandescent light bulbs a few years ago. It's really only the A/C and electric dryer that it can't power. Of course, things like the microwave and hair dryers which use around 1500 watts each can also be used but need to be used judiciously because the max output of that inverter is 3000 watts.
@WildDisease72
Жыл бұрын
Sometomes tells me this will happen soon
@mrdouce1000
Жыл бұрын
Liked the video and wondering if you can tell me where you got the brackets that hold the aluminum prop rods shown in the video at 5:23?
@Eric1Tube
Жыл бұрын
They are built onto the Harbor Freight panels. I was just too lazy to remove them.
@quickquote1568
Жыл бұрын
Nice system except for the transformerless, high frequency inverter. They're not designed for powering inductive loads. You'll be lucky to get 6 months of use out of it before you smoke the MOSFETs. A much better, longer lasting choice is a low frequency, transformer based inverter if you want to run inductive loads like your microwave.
@Eric1Tube
Жыл бұрын
Thanks for your suggestion. I'm not really worried as the 3000W (with 6000W surge) has been replaced with a 4000W (8000W surge) inverter and I did check for guidance on the issues of running microwaves on a solar power system. walkingsolar.com/what-size-inverter-will-run-a-microwave-1000w-1500w-2000w-3000w/ also blog.ecoflow.com/us/how-much-backup-power-to-run-a-microwave/
@powerwall
Жыл бұрын
good bracket
@Eric1Tube
Жыл бұрын
Moveable is a better word.
@powerwall
Жыл бұрын
@@Eric1Tube Agree with you.
@Chris-yy7qc
Жыл бұрын
Nice setup! But you might want to move the fuses as close as possible to the batteries to protect the wires. One question: Why dont you install it permanentely? Kind of pointless to spend this much money and then having it sitting in your garage rather than reducing your electricity bill.
@Eric1Tube
Жыл бұрын
This system may seem pointless to you but is very on point for me. First, it meets the main objective of allowing us to live pretty normally during a power outage and not be stuck in the Stone Age. Secondly, it does so at a price point that I was comfortable with and for which I did not need to take out a multi-year loan. A permanent installation would require rewiring my portions of my house and circuit breaker panel which I am not qualified to do. Since my electric bills are under $100 a month, there is no urgency to make any change. I could have bought a Honda EU7000iS for about the same price as this system and still it would be idle most of the time and only be used during outages. So, not pointless to me.
@XGhozt.
Жыл бұрын
Yay.
@-GrimEngineer-1337
Жыл бұрын
37 amps? Did you wire in parallel instead of series? Well, there goes power due to line loss. Get a MPPT charger with a higher voltage rating and go series instead for much lower amps and much less line loss. More efficient conversion too if you go 48V battery bus instead of 12V. You have the battery and panels to do it, I would seriously think about going with a 48 Volt battery bus. That's what I do and I can use much smaller wiring because with my panels in series I push about 10 amps at 108 volts (1080 watts) per bank of panels (6 panels rated at 180 watts each) with a VOC of about 130 VDC. Using a single 60A charger with a 48v battery system enables me to push up to 2880 watts into my batteries with 3 paralleled-series banks of solar panels.
@Eric1Tube
Жыл бұрын
Actually, I wired them in a hybrid series-parallel arrangement. A number of people have assumed the panels are all in parallel I think because of my comment that 6 amps per panel totals about 36 amps per array. That's pretty much true for what the charge controllers put into the battery regardless of series/parallel/hybrid wiring: kzitem.info/news/bejne/pK5m2YyZnHqTiJw
@fabioforni5722
Жыл бұрын
Would you recommend the renogy solar controlers. I'm getting ready to build a system to power my shed and I'm looking at the components I need to by.
@Eric1Tube
Жыл бұрын
I am fully satisfied with my Renogy controllers. So, yes, I would recommend them.
@aday1637
Жыл бұрын
I eventually moved all the way up to Victron due to failures of key components over time. Now I just go ahead and buy the really good stuff.
@FrankelysHernandez
Жыл бұрын
one thing, is it good to general more energy from the solar panels than what you are consuming? So while there is sun, the battery maintains the charge and at the same time you are using its capacity right?
@Eric1Tube
Жыл бұрын
If the panels are generating more power than the system is using, the charge controllers simply stop charging the batteries when they are full. That way, you don't damage the batteries. I didn't explain it but that was the point of the very last segment of the video which shows the controllers feeding almost zero amps into the batteries.
@igorkvachun3572
Жыл бұрын
Yes sistema. ☀⚡🔌🔋💡
@skeets6060
Жыл бұрын
Nice set up, if you dont mind, how much do you think you have tied up in this ?
@Eric1Tube
Жыл бұрын
It was about $5000, but after I replaced the 12v 3000w inverter with a 24v 4000w inverter, it's about $5500.
@tentimesful
Жыл бұрын
My solarpanels are connected to the net of the electric company, but I got mad once they cut off the electricity for 8 hours and my solar panel didnt power my house. I dont know how they do it but it should have powered my house I think.... Normally when the net is on it powers my house first and sends remaining to the electric company... and no Im not using more than the solarpanels bring...
@Eric1Tube
Жыл бұрын
That would be infuriating.
@mancavechronicles2139
2 жыл бұрын
Where did you find the red slide switches #4 #5 ?
@Eric1Tube
2 жыл бұрын
I bought mine on Amazon. I had specifically Googled the term "triple pole knife switch" because, at the time, I was only looking at 3 arrays and wanted to switch 3 circuits. Then when I added the stand alone panel, I needed another switch.
@swaterman08
Жыл бұрын
its emergeny backup.... you can also just keep it charged via grid power which would prob be cheaper than the cost of the lumber over 5 years. not even counting the panels.
@DougTreff
Жыл бұрын
My initial thoughts too. But notice that even when he is using a modest amount of power, the solar panels are keeping up. This could serve him well during an extended daytime outage allowing him to run longer in the event of a long outage. Great for people in Rural areas where power can sometimes be out for days.
@Eric1Tube
Жыл бұрын
I do have a charger that will charge the battery bank but it takes several hours. The panels actually charge it much faster. I don't store the batteries fully charged in hope they will last longer. I store them about 75% full.
@swaterman08
Жыл бұрын
@@Eric1Tube since you invested in the items already makes sense, I am thinking for others the cost to buy and build and time to move them around. a slow trickle charger from 110v keeping them at 75% at all times might save you money. Depends on where you live, my place we may lose power couple times a year, but never more than 12 hours. I would like to have the battery bank for overnight and keep it during the day with a small genny to charge it.
@sdearing6375
Жыл бұрын
Biden is doing good for the environment. I like your solar set up
@justinnkim
Жыл бұрын
what size cables and fuses are you using?
@Eric1Tube
Жыл бұрын
For the most part, the cables connecting the batteries to each other are 4 gauge. There are two battery banks (each has 4 batteries). The cables connecting each battery bank to the bus bars leading to the inverter are 2 gauge. The copper bars connecting the bus bars to the inverter I think are the equivalent of 1/0 gauge.
@YankeeValleyOutdoors
Жыл бұрын
How many hours does this last you?
@Eric1Tube
Жыл бұрын
10-12 hours if I'm not making an effort to conserve. Roughly 15 hours if I'm making an effort to conserve.
@Imwright720
Жыл бұрын
Solar seems like a lot of components to get AC. I’m not knocking it just trying to figure it out. What’s your total investment currently❓❓
@Eric1Tube
Жыл бұрын
It's about $5500 now that I swapped out the 12v 3000W inverter for a 24v 4000W inverter. I bought the 4000W inverter like new but used from the Giandel website for a bit of a savings.
@SuperVstech
Жыл бұрын
Beware… those bussbars are likely brass, and not capable of handling the amperage your system can output. Best to source true copper bars.
@Eric1Tube
Жыл бұрын
Two things: I did run it full out and checked the temperature of all the connectors. It was good. Subsequently, I converted it from a 12 volt system to a 24 volt system which dropped the amps in half. So, it's OK for now.
@5500rpmvtecpower
Жыл бұрын
Would the heat burn the wood?
@Eric1Tube
Жыл бұрын
None of the components get hot enough to burn anything. Running full out with a 3000 watt load on the inverter, I checked the temperature of the components. Everything was good except for the cheap so-called 275 amp switch (#2 switch on the top of the cart). It got very hot well before 275 amps were running through it. I swapped it out for a much higher quality 600 amp switch (not shown in this video) and all was good.
@GM-qh2ki
Жыл бұрын
A lot of your wire crimps look pretty chincy.
@Eric1Tube
Жыл бұрын
They probably are chintzy. I used a Temco crimper which you have to use a hammer on for the larger gauge wires.
@aday1637
Жыл бұрын
Nice little back up system. Shame you haven't invested in a split phase inverter to make it real world. That would really complete the system for actual usage. Dryer, electric stove, etc could operate with solar. You might need more panels and more batteries to go whole hog.
@Eric1Tube
Жыл бұрын
Yeah, I didn't start off with the intention of making it the size that it is. My original intent was to rely on a gas generator as my primary power backup system. I was just figuring to make a small solar system that would be a secondary back up system in case the generator quit or I couldn't get fuel. Now, the solar cart is the primary back up and the generator is the secondary back up. Probably our next residence will have 100% solar capacity.
@bruceblair1265
Жыл бұрын
A cheap induction cooktop and clothesline take care of some of those concerns, depending on weather.
@SniperTrader2023
Жыл бұрын
You must have a gas furnace.
@Eric1Tube
Жыл бұрын
Yes. So happily, our electric bill was well under $100 a month on average when I assembled this system. So I wasn't really worried about lowering the electric bill.
@SniperTrader2023
Жыл бұрын
@@Eric1Tube I didn't bring that up as far as lowering a bill, but the fact than an electric furnace could not be run without 240v and 40 amps or more. So, mostly impossible without a large high capacity system.
@dougsholly9323
Жыл бұрын
After all that money you spent, you can just tie that system into your power permanently. I don't understand why it is portable. You have all that investment just sitting in your garage not doing anything. Why not have it pay you back?
@Eric1Tube
Жыл бұрын
Because my electric bill was already less than $100 on average so it wasn't really that important to me. My siblings in Arizona have electric bills in the multi hundreds of dollars. But, at some point when I get around to making the necessary wiring changes, my intent is to deploy one or two arrays permanently to power our TV room which has the freezer, a second refrigerator, the big aquarium and the TV/home theater.
@fantasyyy_
Жыл бұрын
Can anyone who understands electricity explain in terms how Amps Watts Voltage aH And so on have in correlation ? I’m currently learning and always am confusing one for the other
@Eric1Tube
Жыл бұрын
This is not strictly correct because the analogy breaks down at some point but if you think of water flowing through a hose or pipe, voltage is the water pressure. Amps are the gallons of water flowing. Watts is the horsepower generated by the water. Amp hours (aH) is how many gallons can be provided in an hour.
@fantasyyy_
Жыл бұрын
@@Eric1Tube thank you this has helped me realize more things
@middleway1885
Жыл бұрын
Noice
@Seriouslydave
Жыл бұрын
Portable? Like a modular home is portable i guess?
@Eric1Tube
Жыл бұрын
Exactly.
@megsman4749
Жыл бұрын
Portable!?
@jessejamesdiver
Жыл бұрын
just wondering why its not on your roof
@Eric1Tube
Жыл бұрын
Two reasons: First, I need to do some refinishing work on my roof and second, I want it to be transportable for when we move. There's a reasonable chance I will put panels over the garage in the future.
@avoice423
Жыл бұрын
The roof is not always the best option as snow and dust reduces power output
@sosteve9113
Жыл бұрын
@@avoice423 or not the best angle to get the most sun
@junkvista61
Жыл бұрын
I heard many complaints and fights between home owners and installers regarding roof damaged/ leak after solar was installed. If your property has space I think ground mount is better way.
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