The REDODO 300Ah refrigerator test went five days in rough solar conditions. Slid in the backup… never miss a beat.
Everything in today’s content:
REDODO 12v 300ah LiFePO4 battery:https://www.redodopower.com/?ref=P6pilyog
Discount code for $120 off: Save 120
Site wide 5% discount code: Aloha5
Power Queen 12.8v 200ah plus LiFePO4 battery:Power Queen:https://ipowerqueen.com/?ref=pBJrCO3s
Discount code:Bob3
Reliable 12v 2000watt pure sine wave inverter:https://amzn.to/3RTQCfS
Victron energy smart MPPT solar charge controller:https://amzn.to/3xdp8cX
Bus bars:https://amzn.to/3BvYTAY
Solar panels:https://amzn.to/3UqajNb
Solar panels:https://amzn.to/3Fogyga
Solar panel extension cables:https://amzn.to/3RQzY0C
Solar panel isolator switch:https://amzn.to/3eEOpGI
Battery cables one foot :https://amzn.to/3DehnHK
Battery cables two feet:https://amzn.to/3TTxeBv
Battery monitor:https://amzn.to/3L13Fd0
Breakers:https://amzn.to/3Bs4V5S
Fuse:https://amzn.to/3qpNZXi
Small inline fuse:https://amzn.to/3B3mWWE
Wall pass through for solar cables:https://amzn.to/3RyNE0t
Solar panels:https://amzn.to/3EO3IGu
As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases
As an affiliate of REDODO Power I earn from qualifying purchase
As a Power Queen affiliate I earn from qualifying purchases
source
Which inverter are you using to do your fridge test?
🎶Let the sun shine! 🎶 Let the sun shine in!🎶
Sorry your not getting any sun, good thing you got some charged spare batteries!!
Oh yea that winter clouds. My remote off grid Utah 20F trailer not looking good. Clouds. Rain dark. Getting 10% power. Panels perfect angle for winter. Just a junk day. I’m
Remotely monitoring from Chicago ha ha. Which is also cold . I probably will make it
But will b close
I could use some help with the math here. Let's say that you did not swap out the battery and let's assume the 25% reading was accurate. The 25% of the 300 Ah battery would = 75Ah. You said the fridge draws 70 watts. How do we calculate how long that battery would last? Since Wattage is volts times amps (forget VA or reactive/real load), which volts do we use? Do we use the 120vAC or the 12vdc? If the 12vdc, then the fridge would be drawing about 5.84 amps per hour, and the battery should have lasted over 12 hours. Is that right? I would sincerely like to know, so I can size my future system to the known and expected loads. TIA for the help.