How do you guys survive winter on solar?
I've been trying to calculate solar needs and the winter month in northern Europe are harsh. Some calculations(based on realworld data for a solar panel station near where I live):
Averaged during the summer month, the solar panel will produce 4 times it's W in Wh per day. So 500W of solar will charge for 2000Wh every day.
Averaged during november (the worst month for solar), the solar panel will only produce 0,57 times it's W in Wh per day. So 500W of solar will charge for 285Wh per day.
My minimum usage per day:
Fridge: 60W * 25% duty cycle * 24h = 360Wh
Laptop: 13W * 8h = 104Wh
Lights: 30W * 4h = 120Wh
pumps: 24W * 0.5h = 12Wh
misc: = 20 Wh
= 616 Wh
Watts required to supply this:
Usage / eff. coeff = 616Wh/0,57 = 1080 W
In November it would require a whopping 1080 W of solar on the roof.
That demand might decrease if it's cold and the fridge doesn't need to run as much, as it's powerdraw is based on 25° ambient temperature. However, that would be slightly offset by increased light usage. Assumption: fridge uses half it's power (180Wh) and light usage goes up (30W * 8h), overall needs are 556Wh, which still requres 975W of solar.
1000W of solar would be difficult financially and spacewise on the roof.
Am I missing something? This seems like a bummer, as it would require daily driving around to charge via alternator.