MattInTheHat
Member
Brand new subscriber here so this idea is likely to have been posted - if so, apologies in advance - BUT:
Has anyone put their solar array on a frame or platform that swivels using hardware for a lazy susan? Just a brief search at Lowe's and Amazon turned up some cheap hardware that will support weights beyond what I need. Below is the one I'm likely to buy ($7).
Attaching even a small, tilt-able wooden (or aluminum) stand on top of the hardware would increase the efficiency of any panel or panels... and just set it on the ground. I'm probably gonna build a small lower stand out of 1" sq aluminum tubing (about $20 for an 8' piece) to keep mine off of wet ground. The higher in latitude you are, the more you'd want to do something like this.
I'm planning a 100W single solar panel build to power some LED light strips, USB phone chargers and a bilge vent blower to run an ice chest a/c in the event of a power outage from a hurricane. I've seen some great ideas like the guy with the 435W panel on his Expedition tow vehicle that he moves throughout the day to keep the panel under direct sun - this is what I'm after b/c I need to get as much as I can out of my little one-panel system. Depending on how well my homemade a/c works, I could use it to augment my home's HVAC during peak summer temps, too.
Has anyone put their solar array on a frame or platform that swivels using hardware for a lazy susan? Just a brief search at Lowe's and Amazon turned up some cheap hardware that will support weights beyond what I need. Below is the one I'm likely to buy ($7).
Attaching even a small, tilt-able wooden (or aluminum) stand on top of the hardware would increase the efficiency of any panel or panels... and just set it on the ground. I'm probably gonna build a small lower stand out of 1" sq aluminum tubing (about $20 for an 8' piece) to keep mine off of wet ground. The higher in latitude you are, the more you'd want to do something like this.
I'm planning a 100W single solar panel build to power some LED light strips, USB phone chargers and a bilge vent blower to run an ice chest a/c in the event of a power outage from a hurricane. I've seen some great ideas like the guy with the 435W panel on his Expedition tow vehicle that he moves throughout the day to keep the panel under direct sun - this is what I'm after b/c I need to get as much as I can out of my little one-panel system. Depending on how well my homemade a/c works, I could use it to augment my home's HVAC during peak summer temps, too.