Solar power question

Wyo37

Member
So I have a 160 watt/9.14 amp solar panel on my travel trailer. All I want to be able to do is run the furnace fan for a few hours a night.

Should that one panel recharge my battery? I am clueless when it comes to electricity fyi
 

Joe917

Explorer
You can expect 36 Amp hrs on average daily charge.
How many Amps does your furnace draw times the number of hours you run it plus all other draws need to be less than that, don't forget a 10% efficiency loss from the batteries.
 

RDinNHand AZ

Active member
It should IF your furnace draws less than about 45Ah (500Wh) per night. Look up it’s Amp draw and estimate how long it actually runs overnight. I think you will be OK. How much battery do you have? You need 100Ah to be sure.
 

Wyo37

Member
Awesome. Thanks, I'll dig into the owners manual and find out.

Based off of propane, it looks like I'll have at least 5 nights on 30lbs, and that's running it 8hrs a night. So I just need the blower to work

I appreciate the help. (FYI it's a jayco 174bh baja)
 

broncobowsher

Adventurer
Have no idea what furnace Jayco uses.
The furnace should have a data sheet. Typically in the owner's manual. If not inside one of the covers. What I want to see is the wattage.
Are you really planning on having the blower run for a full 8 hours at night? Usually they only cycle on when heat is called for.

The battery capacity will get you through the night. The solar needs to be sized to replenish the battery and possibly run the heater during the day. So once we know how much the blower will pull out of a battery, we can size a battery that will work and tell what solar will work.

Does the 160W panel have the potential to do the job? I think so. If the furnace isn't running too much, if it isn't too much of a power hog, if you have good sun during the day on the panel, and about 20 other variables...

If you can't find the specs on the furnace, it can be measured. There are a ton of low cost 12V watt meters on places like Amazon. Put it in line with the battery, run everything as you would for a night but for a hour. This will account for any other draws that may be in the system. If the furnace runs for 15 minutes out of an hour, run it for 15 minutes in that test hour. Subtract the watthour reading at the start of the test from the end of the test, that is how many watts you need to plan for. I would recommend rounding up in case you get an extra cold night or the solar doesn't get enough sun.

How many nights in a row? You might be better off with a little extra battery and letting the solar charge on the weekdays that you are not in it.
 

mep1811

Gentleman Adventurer
Solar is not magic as many people think or have been told. How much power does your furnace use? How large is your battery ? How long can you run the furnace without charging the battery? What else is being powered by the battery?

You want enough solar to be able to run your trailer and still supply a charge to the battery.
 

Wyo37

Member
Ok to bump this old thread i am now interested in running dual deep cycle batteries. Can I just link them in parallel with each other to double my battery life without effecting my solar system?

I just don't want to continuously drain one battery running my heater on colder nights in order to extend the battery life.
 
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jonyjoe101

Adventurer
"Can I just link them in parallel with each other to double my battery life without effecting my solar system?"
yes you can. Once connected together the batteries will equalize and charge and discharge together.
 

crazysccrmd

Observer
While you're rewiring your batteries is a perfect time to add a Victron smart shunt. After you set it up you will have no questions again about what your battery capacity is, how much charge your solar is inputting or how much draw anything in the trailer is pulling out of the batteries.

Shunt
 

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