How much do solar panels cost? How many would I need to power a 2000 sq/ft house?


June 20th, 2009

Where can I buy solar panels? Are you able to install them in town or do you need a special permit to put them on your roof? With energy prices going back up, I've got to do something now. I'm sick of the power company taking an ever increasing chunk of my income.

There's two main approaches, do it yourself solar panels and professional installation of solar panels.

To go 100% solar in a 2000 sq/ft house with a professional install will cost about $50,000. If you have the money, go for it. But most people don't. I'm talking 99% of the people out there. So here's a cheaper option: do it yourself solar panels.

The do it yourself approach is a piece-meal approach. You build one solar panel, then take something in your home off the power grid and put it on this solar panel and battery bank. Over time you build more and more solar panels, a larger battery bank, and you take more and more appliances in your home off the power grid.

For example, you could build 1 solar panel system for about $300 that will take your computer, monitor, tower, modem, and speakers off the power grid.

A couple months later or when you have the money, you take something else off the power grid.

Use this solar power calculator to calculate the number of solar panels you will need to build:
http://www.mysolarsecret.com/solar-power-calculator.html

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Where can you buy insurance for connecting to the power grid with a wind generator in Texas?


February 14th, 2009

A friend of mine would like to install a wind generator for electricity but the local power company won't let him connect to the power grid unless he can show that he has a million dollar insurance policy. He has called every insurance company he can think of and no one has this insurance policy that he can buy. The reason that he wants to connect directly to the power grid is that he does not want to have to use a battery bank but instead use the power grid to store electricity. Do you know where can get this kind of insurance policy in the state of Texas? Thanks.

Your friend isn't telling you the whole story. All you need to do is to call your local power company and tell them that you want a reverse meter so that they can measure the amount of energy you are feeding back into the power grid in order to assign you proper credit. There is specific wiring that you need to use that must be approved by your county. They require this specific wiring so that your system doesn't electrocute a lineman who is working on a line somewhere down from your solar power generator.

You don't go and buy a million dollar insurance policy either. You get an umbrella policy on your homeowner's insurance. An umbrella policy is property insurance that goes beyond what the homeowner's insurance covers. This is also sometimes called secondary insurance. You can google this to find a company that will sell this to you.

Just keep in mind that there are quality standards you need to follow if you connect to the power grid. You need a reverse power relay and an automatic transfer switch that will disconnect you from the power grid in case of a power outage. You also need to say "in phase" with the power grid. The manufacturer of the wind generator should tell you everything you need to know to do this.

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What Big Oil Does Not Want You To Have


December 7th, 2008

A future in which energy is produced without oil is a future that big oil is trying hard to prevent. Big oil is doing whatever it can to see that it continues to have a central role in providing Americans with energy in the future.

No other industry has influenced Presidents and their policies more than big oil.

America invented solar panels but now we are so far behind in green technology thanks to big oil putting George Bush in office, we may never take back our leading role.

Big oil continues to lie to the American people about the feasability of alternative energy projects and they continue to use their media contacts to portray that image.

While big oil is running ads on TV about how they are financing the development of clean energy alternatives for the future, behind the scenes they are doing everything they can to only develop clean energy alternatives that THEY can benefit from by selling to consumers. Take for example the fuel cell or the hydrogen car. These are solutions that are acceptable to big oil and big auto because they can completely control the means of production and distribution for profit. The fuel cell and the hydrogen car are ploys to delay the deployment of the electric car that takes only 8 parts to convert any existing car into an electric car for a price of about $3,000. The car is plugged in at night and costs about $9 a month to charge the battery bank. These are the kinds of solutions that big oil and auto do not want you to have.

The video you are about to see is of a solar power project in Spain that will be completed in 2010. A single 200 MW Solar Tower power station will provide enough electricity to power around 400,000 households. The energy output will represent an annual saving of more than 1,960,000 tonnes of greenhouse CO2 gases from entering the environment when compared to brown coal emissions in Victoria. The greenhouse savings equate to the removal of approximately 500,000 cars from the road.

Think about that. There are about 90 million homes in the U.S. It would take only about 225 of these solar power plants to produce all the electricity for every home in the country. So why aren't we building these now? The reason is that big oil has sponsored every single president in the last few years and big oil doesn't want these solar power plants because they can't profit from them. While big oil runs ads about how we need to break our dependency on foreign oil and how they are researching alternatives; while Bush and the republicans publicly talk about how we need to break our dependency on oil from the Middle East and how green energy is something we need to invest in-- privately both of these groups have worked together for the last 8 years to delay and prevent the kind of alternative energy projects that are taking place in other countries.

So how did big oil get so powerful? The answer involves a study of the oil barons in American history. You can Google that if you are interested. The big oil people who are in control and manipulate Presidents and the media like puppets today because of their vast financial resources are the same oil barons that did 100 years ago who passed down their wealth via inheritance (source Forbes.com):

Rockefeller, David Sr
Rockefeller, Laurance Spelman
Rockefeller, Winthrop Paul
Anschutz, Philip F
Davis, Marvin H
Koch, Charles De Ganahl
Koch, David Hamilton
Kaiser, George B
Bass, Robert Muse
Rowling, Robert
Hunt, Ray Lee
Marshall, E Pierce

Duration : 0:2:07

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How do solar powered houses store energy for nighttime/rainy/bad weather days?


November 30th, 2008

I was wondering how solar powered houses store energy when the sun is not out? What is the device called that actually stores the energy?

That all depends on how you are collecting solar energy.

If you are using solar panels that convert sunlight into electricity, then the energy is stored in what are called deep cycle batteries. It takes a few of these batteries wired together. All the batteries you have wired together that store electricity are called a battery bank.

Your battery bank will store electricity so that you can use that electricity when there is no sun.

If you are using a solar heater that heats water, then the hot water is stored in insulated tanks that you can use later when the sun is not out.

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Build Your Own Solar Power System Instructions


November 28th, 2008

This article will teach you the basics of solar power for producing your own electricity.

It is easy to confuse solar power for the production of electricity, with solar to produce heat. They are different topics. Solar power uses photovoltaic cells to produce electricity called solar panels or PV panels. These panels release electricity when sunlight strikes them. In contrast, a solar heater uses the sun to actually heat water or air flowing through it and it has nothing to do with electricity and PV panels.

Solar panels are pointed at solar south in the northern hemisphere and solar north in the southern hemisphere. Solar north and solar south are a little different than magnetic compass north and south.

The sun strikes the PV panels which creates an eletrical charge which is directed to the output terminals which product DC (direct current) somewhere between 6 and 24 volts depending on the solar panels. Most solar panels are set to output 12 volts.

The total amount of solar power produced by your system is based on what is called Peak Sun Hours. Peak Sun Hours represent the average amount of sun available per day throughout the year for your specific locality.

It is estimated that at "peak sun", 1000 W/m² of power reaches the surface of the earth. One hour of full sun provides 1000 Wh per m² = 1 kWh/m² - representing the solar energy received in one hour on a cloudless summer day on a one-square meter surface directed towards the sun.

The daily average of Peak Sun Hours is used for calculation purposes in the design of the system. To see the average Peak Sun Hours for your area in the United States, go to the solar power calculator at http://www.mysolarsecret.com/solar-power-calculator.html and select the city nearest you under the wording "Select the city nearest you for the number of hours per day of sun" about half way down the page. Follow your eyes across the webpage to the box on the right side of the screen to see the Peak Sun Hours for your area.

Components You Will Need In Your Solar Power System

The four primary components for producing electricity using solar power, which provides common 120 volt AC power for daily use are: Solar panels, charge controller, battery and inverter. Solar panels charge the battery, and the charge regulator insures proper charging of the battery. The battery provides DC voltage to the inverter, and the inverter converts the DC voltage to normal AC voltage.

Solar Panels

The output of a solar panel is usually stated in watts, and the wattage is determined by multiplying the rated voltage by the rated amperage. The formula for wattage is VOLTS times AMPS equals WATTS. So for example, a 12 volt 60 watt solar panel measuring about 20 X 44 inches has a rated voltage of 17.1 and a rated 3.5 amperage.

V x A = W
17.1 volts times 3.5 amps equals 60 watts

If an average of 6 hours of peak sun per day is available in an area, then the above solar panel can produce an average 360 watt hours of power per day; 60w times 6 hrs. = 360 watt-hours. Since the intensity of sunlight contacting the solar panel varies throughout the day, we use the term "peak sun hours" as a method to smooth out the variations into a daily average. Early morning and late-in-the-day sunlight produces less power than the mid-day sun. Naturally, cloudy days will produce less power than bright sunny days as well. When planning a system your geographical area is rated in average peak sun hours per day based on yearly sun data. Average peak sun hours for various geographical areas is listed on the solar power calculator webpage at http://www.mysolarsecret.com/solar-power-calculator.html

Solar Panels For Sale

25 Watt Folding Solar Panel

15 watt Solar Panel

10 WATT SOLAR PANEL FRAMED

15 WATT SOLAR PANEL FRAMED

25 WATT SOLAR PANEL FRAMED

Solar Panel 18-Watt 12-Volt Deep-Cycle Battery Charger

Solar 18-Watt 12-Volt Charger

13 Watt General Purpose Solar Module

Bird-X - SOLPAN2-CRTTR - CritterBlaster Pro Solar Power Panel Accessory - Black - 37 L x 15 W in.

ROOF/GABLE SOLAR PANEL (Ventamatic VXSOLARPANEL)

Sunsei SE-16000 Solar 260-Watt 16.5-Volt Charger

Sunsei SE-24000 Solar 400-Watt 16.5-Volt Charger

Sunsei SE-4000 Solar 65-Watt 16.5-Volt Charger

Sunforce 15-watt Solar Charger with 7-amp Charge Controller

60 Watt Solar Panel with 7 Amp Charge Controller, Model# 37015

10 Watt Black Frame Mono-crystalline Solar Panel and Battery Charger

20 Watt Black Frame Mono-crystalline Solar Panel and Battery Charger

40 Watt Black Frame Mono-crystalline Solar Panel and Battery Charger

Learn About Wiring Solar Panels And Batteries

There are three types of wiring configurations that are relatively easy to learn. Once mastered, the job of wiring batteries or solar modules becomes easy as pie. The three configurations are:

Series wiring
Parallel wiring
And a combination of the two known simply as series/parallel wiring.

Solar panels can be wired in series or in parallel to increase voltage or amperage respectively, and they can be wired both in series and in parallel to increase both volts and amps. Series wiring refers to connecting the positive terminal of one panel to the negative terminal of another. The resulting outer positive and negative terminals will produce voltage the sum of the two panels, but the amperage stays the same as one panel. So three 12 volt/3.5 amp panels wired in series produces 36 volts at 3.5 amps. Four of these wired in series would produce 48 volts at 3.5 amps.

Wiring Solar Panels In Series

To wire any device in series you must connect the positive terminal of one device to the negative terminal of the next device.

Wiring Solar Panels In Parallel

Parallel wiring refers to connecting positive terminals to positive terminals and negative to negative. The result is that voltage stays the same, but amperage becomes the sum of the number of panels. So three 12 volt/3.5 amp panels wired in parallel would produce 12 volts at 10.5 amps. Four panels would produce 12 volts at 14 amps.

Wiring Solar Panels In Series and Parallel

Series/parallel wiring refers to doing both of the above - increasing volts and amps to achieve the desired voltage as in 24 or 48 volt systems.

You might be asking why in the world would someone want to put them self through wiring both in series and in parallel? Let's say that you want to increase the Amp hour rating of a battery pack so that you could run your appliances longer but you needed to wire the pack in such a way as to keep the battery pack at 12 volts, or you want to increase the charging capacity of your solar array but you needed to wire the solar modules in such a way as to keep the solar array at 34 volts, well, series/parallel wiring is the only way to do that.

Charge Controller

A charge controller monitors the battery's state-of-charge to insure that when the battery needs charge-current it gets it, and also protects the battery from being over-charged. Connecting a solar panel to a battery without a regulator seriously risks damaging the battery and can cause a hazard.

Charge controllers (or often called charge regulator) are rated based on the amount of amperage they can process from a solar array. If a controller is rated at 20 amps it means that you can connect up to 20 amps of solar panel output current to this one controller. The most advanced charge controllers utilize a charging principal referred to as Pulse-Width-Modulation (PWM) - which insures the most efficient battery charging and extends the life of the battery. Even more advanced controllers also include Maximum Power Point Tracking (MPPT) which maximizes the amount of current going into the battery from the solar array by lowering the panel's output voltage, which increases the charging amps to the battery - because if a panel can produce 60 watts with 17.2 volts and 3.5 amps, then if the voltage is lowered to say 14 volts then the amperage increases to 4.28 (14v X 4.28 amps = 60 watts) resulting in a 19% increase in charging amps for this example.

Many charge controllers also offer Low Voltage Disconnect (LVD) and Battery Temperature Compensation (BTC) as an optional feature. The LVD feature permits connecting loads to the LVD terminals which are then voltage sensitive. If the battery voltage drops too far the loads are disconnected - preventing potential damage to both the battery and the loads. BTC adjusts the charge rate based on the temperature of the battery since batteries are sensitive to temperature variations above and below about 75 F degrees.

Charge Controllers For Sale

Solar Charge Controller for solar/wind generator/Wind Turbine - 45 amps

Solar Charge Controller for solar/wind generators - 60 amps

Solar Controller 12-Volt Battery Charge Monitor

10 Amp Solar Charge Controller

15-watt Solar Charger with 7-amp Charge Controller

4.5 amp 12 volt Solar Charge Controller Regulator by Morningstar

4 Amp solar charge controller - CDT-C4 regulator 12V #35004

20 Amp Solar Charge Controller with Digital Display

Sunsei SE-CC25000 25 Amp Solar Charge Controller

60 Watt Solar Panel with 7 Amp Charge Controller, Model# 37015

Sunforce Digital Charge Controller - 10 Amp, Model# 600311

Xantrex Charge Controller for DC Charging Sources - 40 Amp, Model# C40

Xantrex Charge Controller for DC Charging Sources - 35 Amp, Model# C35

Xantrex Charge Controller for DC Charging Sources - 60 Amp, Model# C60

I hope you are well on your way to designing your own homemade solar power system from reading this article. If you need additional help in the form of an easy, step-by-step guide on exactly what parts you need to buy and how to connect the parts together see the top two solar panel how to guides that I reviewed at http://www.mysolarsecret.com

Battery

The Deep Cycle batteries used are designed to be discharged and then re-charged hundreds or thousands of times. These batteries are rated in Amp Hours (ah) - usually at 20 hours and 100 hours. Amp hours refers to the amount of current - in amps - which can be supplied by the battery over the period of hours. For example, a 350ah battery could supply 17.5 continuous amps over 20 hours or 35 continuous amps for 10 hours. To quickly express the total watts potentially available in a 6 volt 360ah battery; 360ah times the nominal 6 volts equals 2160 watts or 2.16kWh (kilowatt-hours). Like solar panels, batteries are wired in series and/or parallel to increase voltage to the desired level and increase amp hours.

The battery should have sufficient amp hour capacity to supply needed power during the longest expected period "no sun" or extremely cloudy conditions. A lead-acid battery should be sized at least 20% larger than this amount. If there is a source of back-up power, such as a standby generator along with a battery charger, the battery bank does not have to be sized for worst case weather conditions.

The size of the battery bank required will depend on the storage capacity required, the maximum discharge rate, the maximum charge rate, and the minimum temperature at which the batteries will be used. During planning, all of these factors are looked at, and the one requiring the largest capacity will dictate the battery size.

Deep Cycle Batteries For Sale

Basement Watchdog Deep Cycle Battery (30HDC140S)

Glen Tronics B-1000 Standby Deep Cycle Battery

Glen Tronics B-2200 Standby Deep Cycle Battery

MK Deep Cycle Gel Cell 12 Volt Battery for Backup Sump Pumps

Powerstar 12V 33AH Group U1 Deep Cycle Sealed Battery

Optima Blue Top D34M High-Power Deep-Cycle Battery (870CA)

Optima Dual Post 750 CCA Deep Cycle Marine Battery

Inverter

An inverter is a device which changes DC power stored in a battery to standard 120/240 VAC electricity (also referred to as 110/220). Most solar power systems generate DC current which is stored in batteries. Nearly all lighting, appliances, motors, etc., are designed to use ac power, so it takes an inverter to make the switch from battery-stored DC to standard power (120 VAC, 60 Hz).

In an inverter, direct current (DC) is switched back and forth to produce alternating current (AC). Then it is transformed, filtered, stepped, etc. to get it to an acceptable output waveform. The more processing, the cleaner and quieter the output, but the lower the efficiency of the conversion. The goal becomes to produce a waveform that is acceptable to all loads without sacrificing too much power into the conversion process.

Inverters come in two basic output designs - sine wave and modified sine wave. Most 120VAC devices can use the modified sine wave, but there are some notable exceptions. Devices such as laser printers which use triacs and/or silicon controlled rectifiers are damaged when provided mod-sine wave power. Motors and power supplies usually run warmer and less efficiently on mod-sine wave power. Some things, like fans, amplifiers, and cheap fluorescent lights, give off an audible buzz on modified sine wave power. However, modified sine wave inverters make the conversion from DC to AC very efficiently. They are relatively inexpensive, and many of the electrical devices we use every day work fine on them.

Sine wave inverters can virtually operate anything. Your utility company provides sine wave power, so a sine wave inverter is equal to or even better than utility supplied power. A sine wave inverter can "clean up" utility or generator supplied power because of its internal processing.

Inverters are made with various internal features and many permit external equipment interface. Common internal features are internal battery chargers which can rapidly charge batteries when an AC source such as a generator or utility power is connected to the inverter's INPUT terminals. Auto-transfer switching is also a common internal feature which enables switching from either one AC source to another and/or from utility power to inverter power for designated loads. Battery temperature compensation, internal relays to control loads, automatic remote generator starting/stopping and many other programmable features are available.

Most inverters produce 120VAC, but can be equipped with a step-up transformer to produce 120/240VAC. Some inverters can be series or parallel "stacked-interfaced" to produce 120/240VAC or to increase the available amperage.

Inverters For Sale

Xantrex Technologies 851-0400 XPower Plus 400-Watt Inverter

Xantrex Technologies 851-0178 XPower 175-Watt Micro Inverter

Cobra CPI 475 400 Watt Power Inverter

Jensen JP30 300 Watt Power Inverter

Duracell DC to AC Pocket Power Source Inverter 175 Watt #813-0291-07

Cobra CPI 1575 3000 Watt 12 Volt DC to 120 Volt AC Power Inverter

Cobra CPI 875 1600 Watt 12 Volt DC to 120 Volt AC Power Inverter

Xantrex Technologies 851-0700 XPower Plus 700-Watt Inverter

Belkin F5C400-300W 2 Outlet Dc/Ac Inverter

Vector VEC024BCA 400-Watt Inverter with Case

XANTREX XPOWER POWERSOURCE MOBILE 100 852-0281

Xantrex Technologies 852-0400 XPower PowerSource 400-Watt Portable Inverter

Xantrex Technologies 852-2071 Xpower AC/DC Powerpack Solar With 400 Watt Inverter, Two AC Outlets, USB Port, And Digital Display

Xantrex Technologies 851-0401 XPower Plus 400-Watt Inverter

Tripp Lite PV375 PV 375W 12V DC to AC Portable Inverter with DC Auto Power Outlet

Tripp Lite PV150 PV 150W 12V DC to AC Portable Inverter with DC Auto Power Outlet

Duracell 852-0281-07 DC to AC 100 Watt Inverter & 4.0 Amp/Hour Lithium Ion Mobile Power Source

Cobra CPI 2575 5000 Watt 12 Volt DC to 120 Volt AC Power Inverter

Solar #PI4000X - 400 W Power inverter

I hope you are well on your way to designing your own homemade solar power system from reading this article. If you need additional help in the form of an easy, step-by-step guide on exactly what parts you need to buy and how to connect the parts together see the top two solar panel how to guides that I reviewed at http://www.mysolarsecret.com

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Electric Car Conversion


November 26th, 2008

If you have minimal mechanical skills, you can do your own gasoline to electric car conversion for about $7,000. This electric car has zero emissions and still has enough power to peal out or do 75 MPH on the highway. The car will go 40 miles on one charge, more than enough for local errands like driving to work, picking up the kids from school, or going grocery shopping. The lead-acid batteries in your battery bank need to be replaced about every 25,000 miles.

If electric vehicles are so easy to build, cheap to run, and fun to own, why are we all not driving them? Why have today's auto manufacturers abandoned electric vehicles in favor of hybrids which deliver less performance with greater complexity at a high price while still spitting out greenhouse gases from their tailpipes?

All you need to do an electric car conversion is eight 12-volt lead-acid deep cycle batteries, a forklift truck motor and controller, recharging module, DC-DC converter, mounting hardware, and drivetrain coupler. Total cost including batteries is $7,000 (see images below).

For the easiest, step-by-step instructions on the web go to http://www.mysolarsecret.com/electric-car/

electric car conversion

electric car conversion

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What are the right batteries for a wind generator and where can i find them?


November 21st, 2008

I am looking into building my own wind generator but I don't know the right batteries I should use. Any help would be appreciated.

You are looking for what are called deep cycle batteries, not car batteries. The difference between deep cycle batteries and car batteries is that deep cycle batteries contain solid lead and can withstand losing almost all of their charge and then be re-charged over and over again much better than car batteries. Car batteries will explode or just stop working when you run them down and charge them again about 10 times. As you can image, with solar panels connected to a battery bank, you need batteries that can be drawn down and then re-charged again hundreds of times.

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Home Wind Power With This Homemade Wind Generator Vertical Wind Turbine Design


November 19th, 2008

A friend of mine sent me these plans for how to build a wind generator. This is a vertical wind turbine design. This wind mill will generate 84 watts, 7 amps, at 12 volts in a 30 mph wind.

Materials Needed

Motor - 260 volts DC, 5 amps, treadmill motor with a 6" threaded flywheel. You can use any other simple, permanent-magnet DC more that returns at least 1V for every 25 rpm and can handle upwards of 10 amps.

Bridge Rectifier With Center Hole Mount - 30 to 50A

Mounting Screw - #8 or larger copper wire, red and black, both stranded. You want to have enough length for both a red and black piece to run from the top of the tower, down through the length of the pole, to the batteries. #8 wire is good, but if your tower will be a long distance away from your batteries, you will need a heavier gauge (just 1).

Spade connectors for wires for the bridge rectifier (4 of them)

Heat-shrink tubing or electrical tape

Batter Bank - You need deep-cycle lead-acid storage batteries and a total battery bank capacity of nothing less than 200 amp-hours.

Ammeter

Regulator or Charge Controller

Fuse

Blades

2' length of 8" schedule 80 PVC pipe - If the PVC is UV resistant, you will not need to paint it.

1/4" #20 bolts, 3/4" long (6 of them)

#20 Washers (9 of them)

Lock Washers (6 of them)

Hose Clamp (Just 1)

Vane

1 sq. ft of sheet metal

Mounting Screws and Lock Washers (9 of them)

Mount At Top Of Tower

36" of 1" square metal tubing or 1" angle iron

2" floor flange pipe fitting

2" steel pipe nipple, at least 4" long

Mounting Screws (2 of them)

Motor Mount

#72 Hose Clamps (2 of them)

Tower Pole

10' - 30' length of 1 1/2" steel pipe, threaded at both ends

Tower Base

2'x 1 1/4" steel pipe nipple (2 of them)

6"x 1 1/4" steel pipe nipple

1 1/4" 90-degree steel pipe elbows (2 of them)

1 1/2" steel pipe T

10 lb. bags of quick-mix concrete

3/4" #10 sheet metal screws (4 of them)

Tower Stability

Guy wire, galvanized steel with a load capacity of 200 pounds

1 1/2" U-boltStakes (4 of them)

Turnbuckles (4 of them)

Tools

Drill and drill bits (5/32", 7/32", 1/4"), jigsaw, thread tapping set, pipe wrench, crescent wrench, flathead screw driver, vise and/or clamp, wire strippers, metal punch or awl, tape measure, level, marker, tape, compass and protractor, shovel, wheelbarrow, several ropes (each at least twice the length of the guy wires), and an extra person to help.

I hope you find these instructions for building a wind power generator helpful. If you need more detailed instructions with diagrams showing each step, or are looking for a dummies guide, go to http://www.mysolarsecret.com/how-to-build-a-wind-turbine.htm

Cutting the Blades

Place the 24" length of PVC pipe and square tubing side by side of flat surface. Push the pipe against the tubing and mark the line along the length of the tube.

Draw parallel lines at 75-degree intervals along the length of the pipe. You should have a total of five lines on your pipe. Note that one strip will have an arc width of only 60 degrees. That's fine.

Use a jigsaw to cut along the lines. Splitting the tube into five stips. Four will be wider than the fifth (60-degrees) strip. Set the 60-degree stip aside for now.

Place the four 75-degree strips concave side down. For each one, make a mark 20% of the width of the strip from one corner along the diagonally opposite side as shown. Mark a diagonal line between the two marks you just made on each piece, and use the jigsaw to cut along these lines. You should end up with eight identically shaped trapezoidal blades. You can trim a ninth blade out of the 60-degree strip left over. You now have enough blades for three generators, or plenty of spares for one generator.

Now you will cut one corner from each blade. Measure the width of the blade (if you are using an 8" diameter PVC pipe it should be about 5.75" wide). Call this value W. Then make a mark along the diagonal edge of the blade, a distance of W/2 from the wide end (3" is good if you are using 8" PVC). Make another mark on the wide end of the blade at 15% of W from the long straight edge (1" with 8" PVC)

Connect these two marks and cut along the line. Removing this corner prevents the blades from interfering with each other's wind.

The Tail

Cut the tail. You can make it any shape you want. The exact dimensions of the tail are not important, but you'll want to use about one square foot of lightweight material, preferably metal.

Using the 5/32" drill bit, drill two or three holes, spaced evenly, in the front end of the tail. Then place the tail on one end of the square tubing, noting that it will attach to what will become either the right or left side of the tubing, as the generator sits upright. Mark the tubing through the tail holes.

Drill holes in the square tubing at the marks you just made.

Attach the tail to the tube with sheet metal screws.

Attaching the Blades

Take three blades. For each blade mark two holes along the long, right-angle side of the blade (as opposed to the long diagonal side), at the wide end, next to the cut-off corner. The first hole should be 3/8" from the long side and 1/2" from the end, and the second hole should be 3/8" from the straight edge and 1 1/4" from the end.3b. Using the 1/4" drill bit, drill these six holes for the three blades.

Detach the hub from the motor shaft. With our motor, we removed the hub by holding the end of the shaft firmly with pliers and turning the hub clockwise. This hub unscrews clockwise, counter to the usual direction, which is why the blades turn counterclockwise.

Using a compass and protractor, make a template of the hub on a piece of paper. Then mark three holes, each of which is 2 3/8" from the center of the circle, 120 degrees apart, equidistant from each other.

Place this template over the hub and use a metal punch or awl to punch a starter hole through the paper and onto the hub at each hole.

Drill the holes with the 7/32" drill bit, then tap them with the 1/4" tap.

Attach the blades to the hub using 1/4" bolts, running them through the holes closest to the ends of the blades. At this point, the three outer holes on the hub have not been drilled.

Measure the distances between the tips of each blade, and adjust them so that they are all equidistant. Then mark and punch starter holes for the three outer holes on the hub through the empty holes in each blade.

Label the blades and hub so that you can match which blade goes where.

Remove the blades, and drill and tap the three outer holes on the hub.

Position each blade in its place on the hub, so that all the holes line up. Using the 1/4" bolts and washers, bolt the blades back onto the hub. For the inner three holes, use two washers per bolt, one on each side of the blade. For the outer holes, just use one washer next to the head of the bolt. Tighten.

I hope you find these instructions for building a wind power generator helpful. If you need more detailed instructions with diagrams showing each step, or are looking for a dummies guide, go to http://www.mysolarsecret.com/how-to-build-a-wind-turbine.htm

Assemble the Generator

Drill a 5/32" hole in the tubing about 5 inches from the front end of the tube, opposite the tail holes end, on any side. Place the bridge rectifier over the hole, and screw it to the tubing using a #10 sheet metal screw.

Using hose clamps, mount the motor on the end opposite the tail. Do not tighten the clamps, because you will make a balance adjustment later.

Crimp spade connectors onto the black and red wires from the motor, and connect them to the two AC voltages in terminals on the bridge rectifier, L1 and L2. Insulate connections with heat-shrink tubing or electrical tape.

Attach the tail.

Re-attach the blade assembly on the motor.

Now attach the tower mount. Using a pipe wrench, screw the nipple tightly into the floor flange. Clamp the nibble in a vice so the floor flange faces up and is level.

Set the generator on the flange/nipple and balance it by adjusting the position of the motor, then tighten the hose clamps down. Mark spots in the square tubing that match up with the flange holes.

Drill these two holes using a 5/32" drill bit.

Attach the square tubing to the floor flange with two sheet metal screws.

Secure the Tower Base

Dig a round hole about 1 foot in diameter and 2 feet deep.

Feed the 6" x 1 1/4" steel pipe nipple through the horizontal part of the 1 1/2" steel pipe T.

Screw the pipe elbows onto each end of the nipple, one on either side of the T, so that they both point in the same direction.

Screw the two 2' x 1 1/4" pipe nipples into the free ends of the elbows.

Set this hinged base assembly in the hole, so that the T just clears the ground. Dig around, adjust, and position things so that the 2" nipples point straight down and the horizontal part of the T is perfectly level.

With the base properly positioned, mix some concrete and pour it into the hole.

Erect the Tower

Drill a large hole about 1 foot from the bottom of the 10' - 30' pipe, for the copper wires to exit.

Screw the pipe into the vertical part of the base's hinged T.

Make four strong, flexible rings out of guy wire, about 5 inches in diameter. For each ring, loop the wire around several turns, and twist it closed.

Place the 1 1/2" U-bolt around the pipe. 3 feet from the top of the pipe. Thread the four wire loops around the u-bolt, and space them evenly around the pipe. Then tighten the nuts of the U-bolt.

Secure a guy wire to each of the loops on the U-bolt. Also loop the ropes (safety ropes) through loops on opposite sides of the pole.

Position the four stakes, spacing them evenly apart at a distance away from the base that's at least 50% of the tower's height. For our 15-foot-tall pole, we positioned the stakes 12 feet away from the base. Then drive the stakes firmly into the ground, slightly angling them away from the base. Or, for greater strength and permanence, dig holes 2 feet into the ground, and set the stakes in concrete.

Wire a turnbuckle to each stake, using several strands of guy wire.

Raise the pole up and tie each of the safety ropes to something solid, like a truck or building (this is where having another person helps). Attach the guy wires to the turnbuckles.

Hold the pole straight upright, and tighten all turnbuckles to ensure a secure fit.

Mark the front turnbuckle for future reference, so you know how far you need to screw it back in when you're re-raising the pole.

Wire and Mount the Generator

Release the front guy wire and lower the pole to the ground.

Feed two lengths of #8 wire, red and black, down through the pole and out through the hole in the bottom of the pipe. Then wrap the bottom ends of the two wires together to create a closed circuit. This is a safety precaution: it puts a load on the wind generator to prevent it from spinning around fast while you're working on it.

Slide the generator assembly over the top of the pole.

Pull the pole wires up through the mount, strip the ends, and crimp them into spade connectors. Plug the red wire into the DC+ terminal of the spade connector and the black wire into the DC- terminal. Insulate connections with heat-shrink tubing or electrical tape.

Raise the pole by pulling the front guy wire into place, and tighten the turnbuckle to the mark made earlier.

homemade wind generator

Unwrap the ends of the wires and wire up your system as shown in the diagram above. Connect a regulator, an ammeter, a fuse, and a stop switch on the positive line coming from the generator between the generator and the battery bank. Then hook up the battery bank and you're done!

I hope you find these instructions for building a wind power generator helpful. If you need more detailed instructions with diagrams showing each step, or are looking for a dummies guide, go to http://www.mysolarsecret.com/how-to-build-a-wind-turbine.htm

 

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Can I make a wind turbine at home?


November 15th, 2008

I want to make a wind turbine at home. I want to know how much this would cost? I do not want one of those massive things you see at wind farms. I just want to make a small wind turbine to power things such as an outside fridge and some lighting.

The first thing you need to do is to use the calculator on this blog to calculate the amount of watts your refrigerator or lighting pull. Once you know that number, you can then go about planning how to build a wind turbine at home and how big your battery bank will need to be and if you need to build more than one wind turbine.

The small wind turbine you need will cost about $150 to build. Probably the best step by step guide for doing this is here: http://www.mysolarsecret.com/how-to-build-a-wind-turbine.htm

The guide will show you how to get most of the parts from your local hardware store and what parts you need to buy. You can set up an entire wind power generator system using this guide in one day. It makes for a great weekend project.

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What is a good type of solar panel to get for my house?


October 24th, 2008

With the rising cost of my monthly power bill I have decided that I want to put a solar panel(s) on my roof. What parts do I need in addition to the solar panels? Solar power controller? Wires? How do I wire it into my home's electrical system and about how much electricity would I create and save each month? Would the panels pay for themselves over time? Any help you can provide will be much appreciated. Thank you!

You need solar panels. The solar panels plug into a controller so you need a controller. The controller plugs into a battery bank so you need deep cycle batteries. Your battery bank plugs into an inverter which converts the current into AC that can be used in your home so you need an inverter. That's pretty much it. You just basically buy these parts and plug them together. Of course you need mounting racks for your solar panels if you plan on putting them on your roof.

Whether the panels pay for themselves depends on how you finance them. If you do it the way that most people do by going through a professional solar power company, then you are looking at a price tag of about $20,000. With interest on the financing, it will take about 10 - 15 years before you reach the break even point.

If you build and install your own solar panel system, then the price is much cheaper. You can build a solar panel system for about $200. The more panels you use, that price goes up. But if you do it yourself it will pay for itself in a matter of months rather than years. There are a few really good guides on the market that will guide you through the process and tell you exactly how to get solar panels cheap, how to buy cheap recycled deep cycle batteries, and how to wire everything into your home's electrical system. You can see the top two guides reviewed by clicking here on this link solar panel how to guides.

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