by Zentric » Wed 27 Jul 2005, 19:39:15
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('BrownDog', '1')2VDC to 120VAC back to 18.5VDC seems like taking the long way around the block, since you'll get losses at each conversion. I'm no EE, either, I'm just thinking of the conversion losses. Perhaps somebody who knows better than I do can comment?
I've been meaning to figure this one out definitively myself. Instead of going from solar cell
to battery
to inverter
to laptop transformer
to laptop, you can skip a couple steps and wasted electricity by going from solar cell
to battery
to laptop.
The thing is, how do you know ahead of time, for sure, whether the laptop you're planning to buy mailorder will successfully run on the 12VDC (take it or leave it) battery current? The same also goes for other "brick in the wall"-type electronic appliances as well.
Since I'm finding that a lot my own appliances run on ~18VDC, I wonder if I could somehow use solar array(s) to charge 12V and 6V batteries simultaneously, automagically providing the desired 18V output through rigging the batteries in series?
If the battery types are essentially identical, except for their voltages, would they be expected to work well in concert?
Also, my electrical theory is a little rusty here, wouldn't such a setup also provide safe 12VDC and 6VDC solutions?
Note: One thing I've concluded since I've begun to investigate a budget backup power solution for my home, is that DC is better than AC. The reason is (as another poster on this site has earlier shared) that things like computerized dishwashers, smoke alarms, doorbell transformers and wall-bricks suck up a whole lot of juice while essentially doing nothing. So, during a power outage, you want that stuff to stay off-line.