John61CT said:The best battery value by far is Duracell (actually Deka/East Penn) FLA deep cycle golf cart batteries, 2x6V, less than $180 per 200+AH pair from BatteriesPlus or Sam's Club.
bonvanroulez said:You post this statement a lot and it has a grain of truth, if you assume that vandwellers are all Sams Club members, and if you ignore taxes and core charges . . .
Not sure why you need to exaggerate their value, but it is misleading.
RVTravel said:Also, if you go with two golf cart batteries for 200+ AH capacity, you are then forced to get at least 200-400 watts of solar to keep them charged (some keep saying we must have 2 to 1 panel to AH). That won't fit on many cars. That is very expensive. And the batteries will be ruined if you don't charge them fully.
DLTooley said:You need to look at your specific machine. Mine is a newer Phillips Respironics which uses flexible pressure. This reduces the actual power consumed greatly from the rated maximum. Most people do NOT use their humidifiers as that is a big power draw.
I've had zero issues with a 50 watt panel and a cheaper walmart battery. I didn't do much else with it, save charging smaller batteries. The above configurations are very good options for a basic solar set up. You can reduce your battery use by timing your heaviest loads during the middle afternoon when your battery bank is getting full and the sun is still strong.
Spaceman Spiff said:It took me 10 minutes to find an acquaintance that has a Sam's Club membership willing to escort me in to buy my batteries.
Taxes and core charges vary by location, so are not usually included when quoting prices; not misleading.
Itripper said:CPAP 12V power cords
Yes I left this info out, I have the same CPAP (Phillips Respironics) and ordered the 12V power cord which helped reduce power used, the Phillips can run on 12v. I started with a 100 AH battery and a 100 watt Renogy panel, the CPAP would drain it about 60% every night, and the battery wouldn't get enough charge to make it more than 4 days. That's why I say it is doable on one battery and one 100 watt panel if that's all that can be accommodated. You would really just need to hook battery jumper cables from your vehicle to the CPAP battery about every 3 days and run the car for 1/2 an hour to get a decent charge back into the battery, the solar can make up the rest. The larger battery/solar recommondations I made will cover nightly CPAP use over years with no real damage to the batteries. CPAPs in general draw too much power for a single battery setup so one battery will generally die in about a year.
I see you had no issues with a 50 watt panel and a Walmart battery, that might work in strong AZ sunlight in the summer, but I found in partially cloudy year round or short winter sunlight conditions that wont last long.
bonvanroulez said:So you figured out how to circumvent paying the Sam’s Club member’s fee. I assume people would buy them legitimately as a paid member or pay the requisite surcharge. You would probably not be able to get warranty on them.
The merchandisers always disclose those fees in their listings, that is not misleading. John61ct giving people the impression that they can own a pair of gc2s for under $180 is misleading.
Netter said:Hi, I think we may have the same one, mine is set to auto sense from 5 to 15. But it does have the humidifier, also set to auto, but I can adjust all settings if i want to. I just got it a week or so ago.
Thanks!
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