So for some projects I've mentioned I have a need for a 12v air compressor. Also I am not running solar at the moment and no longer have my old batteries or panels.
My sister has a 12 volt jump box she has to use on a lot of cold mornings that recharges thru 120V. It has an air compressor, 12 Volt jumpstarter, cigarette lighter socket, USB I believe, lantern, and a volt meter. Some models have a built in inverter as well for 120V AC.
During the summer months I often sit around the fire at night listening to music, slow cooking, maybe having an adult beverage and I find the need for power. But not lots.
Ok so I'll buy one and start my experiments. Then again... how will I recharge it if shore power isnt available? Do I want to break the case open on day one of ownership to install an MPPT controller on the battery and rig an MC4 connector in place on the outside? Dear me. Lightbulb!?
Why not recharge thru AC? It has a built in charger that has the proper charging algorithm for the battery chemistry. I'll be maintaining its charge from AC when I do my solar build anyway. And I have no idea what chemistry the battery uses anyway. They used to be SLA batteries I think but these new models are super lightweight so I'm thinking they could have lithium batteries.
So build the solar bank now and add the jumpstarter later? Or figure out a way to recharge it as is?
Here's the idea. I'm planning on buying a 100 watt poly panel anyway then buy 2 more as budget allows. What if I wired the panel straight in to an inverter rated at say 75 watts? Panels put out 18 volts or more if I remember correctly so the inverter would need to regulate voltage or I'd have to use a voltage limiting circuit between the 2. It sounds a bizarre setup even to me and I'm the looney who hatched the scheme in the first place.
Possible outcomes. I fry my inverter. I fry the jumper Circuitry. I fry the internal battery in the jumper. If I break It i get to take it apart and look for the gremlins that make it tick so win win. Right?
My sister has a 12 volt jump box she has to use on a lot of cold mornings that recharges thru 120V. It has an air compressor, 12 Volt jumpstarter, cigarette lighter socket, USB I believe, lantern, and a volt meter. Some models have a built in inverter as well for 120V AC.
During the summer months I often sit around the fire at night listening to music, slow cooking, maybe having an adult beverage and I find the need for power. But not lots.
Ok so I'll buy one and start my experiments. Then again... how will I recharge it if shore power isnt available? Do I want to break the case open on day one of ownership to install an MPPT controller on the battery and rig an MC4 connector in place on the outside? Dear me. Lightbulb!?
Why not recharge thru AC? It has a built in charger that has the proper charging algorithm for the battery chemistry. I'll be maintaining its charge from AC when I do my solar build anyway. And I have no idea what chemistry the battery uses anyway. They used to be SLA batteries I think but these new models are super lightweight so I'm thinking they could have lithium batteries.
So build the solar bank now and add the jumpstarter later? Or figure out a way to recharge it as is?
Here's the idea. I'm planning on buying a 100 watt poly panel anyway then buy 2 more as budget allows. What if I wired the panel straight in to an inverter rated at say 75 watts? Panels put out 18 volts or more if I remember correctly so the inverter would need to regulate voltage or I'd have to use a voltage limiting circuit between the 2. It sounds a bizarre setup even to me and I'm the looney who hatched the scheme in the first place.
Possible outcomes. I fry my inverter. I fry the jumper Circuitry. I fry the internal battery in the jumper. If I break It i get to take it apart and look for the gremlins that make it tick so win win. Right?