My battery bank was aging a bit, so I decided to upgrade to the AGM type and to upgrade the system to 24 volts from 12. I still have some 12 volt equipment such as some LED lights and a couple of ham radios, so I also had to purchase a step down for those to work. Here is a list and links of all of the equipment:
If you have followed my posts at all, you know that I already have a couple 100 watt solar panels.
Here is the basic setup. I know the wiring isn't pretty, but it works:
![13087531_10208755778794075_755529850030760945_n[1].jpg 13087531_10208755778794075_755529850030760945_n[1].jpg](https://www.yurtforum.com/forums/data/attachments/0/820-046fa9e4b9d32264f7e5ef33a3b68b26.jpg?hash=rKj5RJdmDE)
A closer view:
![13087784_10208755778634071_5876564086147177843_n[1].jpg 13087784_10208755778634071_5876564086147177843_n[1].jpg](https://www.yurtforum.com/forums/data/attachments/0/821-1f89dea5a22c58a6b4ea6a481478fc43.jpg?hash=nv3Guv6K-q)
Basically the setup is like this: The two panels are wired in series and come in at 24v to the charge controller which dumps to the battery until full.
From the series tied battery bank, I have mounted the terminal fuse blocks. 30 amp fuses hold the wires going to the toggle switch -> step down converter -> distribution block -> various 12v load. The second fuse in the terminal block is 100amp to the 1500 watt pure sine 24v inverter.
This provides me with ample capacity. In fact, I haven't been able to draw the battery bank below 25.4 volts yet, and that included a night we were there when it was raining so we stayed inside and watched 3 movies on a small computer monitor while also having a couple different laptops charging.
If I were to use this every day, I would probably buy 4 more panels. But since we use this only every other weekend and the occasional week straight, I probably will leave it at two.
Anyway, just thought I would share.
- Two AGM Batteries (Sun Extender PVX-2580)
- Step down converter
- Distribution block
- 24v inverter
- 2 dual terminal fuse blocks
- 2 single terminal fuse blocks
- 2 - 30amp fuses
- 4 - 100amp fuses
- Toggle switch
If you have followed my posts at all, you know that I already have a couple 100 watt solar panels.
Here is the basic setup. I know the wiring isn't pretty, but it works:
![13087531_10208755778794075_755529850030760945_n[1].jpg 13087531_10208755778794075_755529850030760945_n[1].jpg](https://www.yurtforum.com/forums/data/attachments/0/820-046fa9e4b9d32264f7e5ef33a3b68b26.jpg?hash=rKj5RJdmDE)
A closer view:
![13087784_10208755778634071_5876564086147177843_n[1].jpg 13087784_10208755778634071_5876564086147177843_n[1].jpg](https://www.yurtforum.com/forums/data/attachments/0/821-1f89dea5a22c58a6b4ea6a481478fc43.jpg?hash=nv3Guv6K-q)
Basically the setup is like this: The two panels are wired in series and come in at 24v to the charge controller which dumps to the battery until full.
From the series tied battery bank, I have mounted the terminal fuse blocks. 30 amp fuses hold the wires going to the toggle switch -> step down converter -> distribution block -> various 12v load. The second fuse in the terminal block is 100amp to the 1500 watt pure sine 24v inverter.
This provides me with ample capacity. In fact, I haven't been able to draw the battery bank below 25.4 volts yet, and that included a night we were there when it was raining so we stayed inside and watched 3 movies on a small computer monitor while also having a couple different laptops charging.
If I were to use this every day, I would probably buy 4 more panels. But since we use this only every other weekend and the occasional week straight, I probably will leave it at two.
Anyway, just thought I would share.
