RevDen said:
Folks,
Here is my problem, I know nothing about electricity, chargers, inverters, converters, deep cycle, amps, watts, etc.
So when I read what you've written, I don't know enough to understand what you mean.
...
I know that this must sound like a chump but I've taken days to read it and I don't know where else to turn besides you fine folks.
Dennis,
You don't sound like a chump to me. You sound very reasonable. Reasonable needs and reasonable confusion.
Despite what anyone might tell you, this stuff ain't simple or straightforward. Anybody who says otherwise is trying to blow their own horn. I'm no laggard when it comes to understanding stuff, learning, seeking my own answers, etc., and I'm struggling. That can be made harder by the fact that some people (not here necessarily, but solar forums, etc) seem to delight in writing a full volume of IEEE standards every time you ask a question and thus making everything as complex as they can make it. Fortunately, some people are better. You've encountered a few here.
In total seriousness, from the reading and discussing that I've done over the last year, off and on, I've come to my own conclusion that there are really only four feasible options to get solar power in your van/truck/RV/house ... listed in order of decreasing pain:
1) Go back to school and get an EE degree with a major in solar energy.
2) Throw wads of cash at some solar vendor and tell them what you want.
3) Get qualified volunteer help to do the full needs analysis that most here have been recommending and then design and install a system, piece-by-piece, that meets those needs.
4) Take a recommendation like Bob's above, buy a few common things, slap them together, start using them, and discover along the way what's good, what's bad, what needs upgrading, etc. Make allowances for some disappointment and premature replacement costs.
Each one has pros and cons. If there's a fifth option, I'm not aware of it.
At the present state of technology, people who would score less on the SAT than your dog can buy a very complex smart phone and use it, without understanding CDMA or 4G protocols. That is the way technology
should be for users.
Sadly, solar energy just isn't there yet. However, just in the time I've been learning about it, it has gotten a bit better, almost as if someone in the solar/battery industries understands what I just said and is trying to fix it. Still, in my opinion, that will be long, slow improvement ... not in time for us.
You might feel lost, but it's a well-worn, and mostly unavoidable path.
Vagabound