Saturday, June 30, 2018

Reading up on batteries etc

Since my charge controller is playing silly buggers on me, I was looking at alternatives today while also looking at what exactly constitutes a flat battery.

My battery is a 35AH Thunderbolt Magnum 12V Deep Cycle battery. It’s referred to everywhere except on the battery as being AGM but it looks to me very much like it’s just a SLA. If it was AGM, it would say so. There are both raving and castigating reviews online which really doesn’t help much. In fact most online reviews I have learned to discount as they have a high degree of subjectivity rather than objectivity. Those with the most detailed and objective negative review just seem too fake to be believable. That’s the other thing - if it sounds unbelievable, it really isn’t believable.

I just measured the battery after sundown at 13.1V. That’s quite high as I understand SLA batteries are at 100% charge when the voltage reads 12.7v to 12.8v. They’re at 40% charge which is the lowest recommended charge at 11.9v. By the time they reach 10.5v they’re so flat it’s not even funny and have probably been damaged by the depth of discharge.

There seem to be two types of battery charging - PWM and MPPT and reading up on these it seems that PWM pulses power from the solar panels to the batteries. I’m not sure why that would be and it seems pretty strange. The more charge there is in the batteries, the longer gaps there are between the pulses and the shorter the pulse. That just seems an utterly strange way of doing things to be honest.

MPPT seems pretty complex at first then just gets ever more bizarre. I’ve read the descriptions enough to know what’s going on but it just still seems bizarre. They’re also pretty darned expensive! One day I might try one but don’t bet on it! It could be that the descriptions as to how they work are just extremely badly put together. Technical people largely seem to have no command of the English language.

My charge controller is still going nuts even though I now have a .1 microfarad capacitor on it. I’ll try it with a 1 microfarad and see what happens. I have a feeling the charge controller is the problem and my research today has involved various things up to and including doing without charge controllers.

At its crudest level a high-voltage cutout is what’s needed to stop a solar panel wired directly to the battery from overcharging the battery. A low voltage cutout is all that’s needed to stop a battery from being discharged too deeply. The rest is all fluff.

If one checks the voltage regularly - note that I have a voltmeter on every USB station in the bus - then there’s absolutely no reason to go below 50% on the batteries. In fact I’ve seen a charge controller that is just that - it controls battery charge level without touching the battery use side. Thus a battery can be charged without an included low-power cutout. That actually sounds far better than what I have right now.

As far as the battery is concerned, those 35 amp hours don’t seem to be all that much to be honest. In theory at 40% maximum discharge those 35AH should give me 21 usable AH of power. That means my twin fans consuming 2.5A each should run for just over 4 hours before cutting off. I’ll bet you they won’t though! I’ll program my charge controller to cut out at 12v one day and will run those fans just to see how long it’ll run before they cut out. My betting is considerably less than 4 hours!

So, it looks like I have two options ahead. First I can get just a plain Jane charge controller and say to heck with an automated power cutout, relying upon my voltmeters instead or I can get an MPPT controller. Perhaps even just say stuff the fancy Nancy stuff and go for a basic overcharge preventer and over discharge preventer.

It sounds as though the MPPT does a half-assed job with the charging. It sounds as though it does a bit better than the PWM controller but that’s not saying an awful lot. PWM just seems utterly strange - it takes the solar panel output, throws away anything over 14v and supplies just 14v at the amperage coming from the panel. MPPT concentrates the (for example) 19v and converts it down to 14v but outputs it at a higher amperage. That sounds fine and dandy but when your panel might in poor light be producing 9v, it’s still throwing that away rather than boosting it to 14v but at a lower amperage.

It looks like I need to do something. It could just be that the charge controller I have is junk. I’ve been through several cheap Chinese charge controllers but then I’ve not yet come across anything that’s made in the USA yet. Half of the stuff sold as “USA made” is actually made in China but assembled in the USA. It’s as though they buy the same cheap crappy charge controllers that I can find on ebay and then put them in a fancy package and charge ten times the price. I would not put it past them to do this. As the new trendy technology, all the sharks dive in and start flogging junk at high prices. It happened with computers then mobile phones then tablets and now it’s solder.

Well, my bank statement comes in a few days so I’ll be able to see what I can afford. I might try one of the MPPT controllers if I can’t get my current controller to play nicely with the fans. I’m between a rock and a hard place there. The LED controller won’t charge the batteries fully and won’t cut the power when the battery gets too low. The LCD controller throws a wobbly when I start my fans.

Friday, June 29, 2018

Successes and burned fingers!

The day started with my finally tidying the wiring for the door unlocker. I didn’t feed it through a fresh hole in the heater panel nor did I bore a fresh hole to feed the wire through. I simply used electrical tape on the connections that needed insulation and fed the rest into cable conduit. Then I attached it all in place against other cables with zip ties. It looks a lot tidier.
Puzzling over the charge controllers, I have a problem. I don’t remember which night after I blogged that I switched them over. Anyway, the CMP02 controller was fine but didn’t seem to be charging the batteries properly. It was 20A anyway and I needed 30A. I replaced it with another controller - one of the digital controllers. That seems to handle the battery better but threw a power off every time I switched the extraction fans on. Reading up on that, apparently a 100 microfarad Mylar film capacitor should be used with electric motors to stop power surges. That left me with a problem - Radio Shack went bankrupt and the only things I got were three way switches and a few connectors. I didn’t think I’d be needing any electronics because let’s face it my past record with electronics is hardly stellar.

In my drawer I did find a 0.1 microfarad polyester film capacitor. It’s 1000 times lower than needed but after a great deal of trepidation I connected it between the live side of the two motors and the bus body (which is the ground). Lo and behold the fan started without throwing a power off. That started me on a soldering expedition to connect all the required wires together. In doing that I managed to burn my left ring finger with the soldering iron as I manoevered wires into place then my right thumb and first finger on molten solder as I was trying to adjust something else. That was a whole load of fun, I can tell you!
So, the wiring now looks a load more complicated but the motor now does not trip the failsafe on the charge controller. Well, it doesn’t do it all the time. When there’s an extra lamp on, yes it will. That tells me I’m on the right track and should make haste to order a 100 microfarad capacitor or even two. I truly hate that I have to spend 20 cents on capacitors and $5 on postage. Still, I suppose it beats Radio Shack with their $7 per capacitor. It’s just the sheer convenience of being able to breeze into Radio Shack, pick what I need and breeze out.
Last night I went to the bus to fiddle with something and found that the lamp at the back of the bus would not light. I flipped the switch and nothing happened then I noticed a blown fuse. I replaced the fuse and flipped the switch. The light came on then went out, blowing the fuse as it did. That’s the first failure of my LED lightbulbs in the bus. It’s rather galling since I’ve not actually used those LEDs all that much! For the moment I have a nasty Chinese junk eBay LED in place. I’ll have to pick up another pack of 4W LEDs from Walmart next time I’m there.

Speaking of Walmart I need to go next door to pick up 15 feet of cable. Then I can build the last solar input on the back of the bus. That will complete my last modification. I’ve ordered a switch to turn that solar input off and on. My SAE to cigarette lighter connector is still apparently in the post. I do need to order that capacitor but otherwise to all intents and purposes the bus is completed. I’m way past my original completion date. There’s still some maintainance left to do on the bus side of things as opposed to the house side but that is a totally different kettle of fish!

Thursday, June 28, 2018

Small changes

Today was a day of small changes. Those with longer memories will recall at one time I tried painting “Max 55MPH” on my back bumper but then thought far better of it and blocked it out again. Today I put the replacement. Prompted by what I’ve seen on the backs of large trucks, instead of rushing out to buy a read-made sticker, I used the stencils I already had to put a sign on the back bumper. This one says “Stay back 300 feet”. Normally such signs say “keep back 300 feet” but “stay” might have more impact as it’s different.
Looking at the cables coming from the heater console I elected to leave them the way they are but to add some cable cladding to protect them. The area behind the driver’s seat will not be used for storage of anything other than perhaps a jerry can. I would have done that and taped the connections I’d bolted together but my electrical tape seems to have run off with the circus. I’ll have to find that!
Not being happy with my LED charge controller I switched it for a higher amperage digital controller. While I like the information it’s giving me, it seems to trip every time the extraction fan comes on. It’s most definitely not over its current specification. What I think is happening is the fan is causing a spike in the current and that’s what’s tripping the charge controller. I’m not sure how to resolve that. The charge controller I had been using wasn’t cutting out when the voltage was low - instead it was pulsing the current which meant my lights would flash on and off. I need something that works in order to find out what’s going on. I wonder whether the battery is good but until I can get a charge controller that doesn’t fart about in place then I’m a bit stumped. Thus far all I’ve seen have been other people repackaging the same Chinese charge controller in an almost identical or very little different plastic box and charging between tens and hundreds of dollars more.
Today I made use of one of my new solar panels - this one I plugged in, inside the bus using the internal charging point. I have to say it looks pretty good and performs pretty well. The right hand side of the window needs a new sign. My old sign that said “Next Stop Fort Leavenworth faded. I’ll have to get some small stencils and do a more permanent sign. I’m still keen on Fort Leavenworth but I might put “Death Row, Fort Leavenworth” on the new sign. That should keep nosey-parkers away.
The cigarette socket to SAE 2-pin converter is still apparently on its way. For some unknown reason it seems to be staying in New York for a few days. Heaven knows why - there’s not much worth seeing or doing in New York unless you’re into the red light district. I gather the first stop on the subway from the red light district is the medical district and the first building from there is an STD clinic. Rather appropriate! 

Still remaining to be done - install my new cable and tidy the existing cables for the door controller. Add a cable into the battery compartment so that the batteries can be topped up from solar. I might then re-employ the cutoff switch that came with the bus and use it as a cutoff switch, passing it through the side of the battery compartment. I’m still thinking on that one. 

Other than that the bus is complete. It just needs me to tidy it, remove the non essential tools and supplies then go through some of the boxes of stuff. Most of it is probably junk and clothes that don’t fit any more. I did have a massive pile of medical books form a course I once did. Those I donated as they just couldn’t be sold. I couldn’t even get $5 for them on Craigslist! Actually the Craigslist and ebay experiences I’ve had have taught me never to buy anything I absolutely don’t need and won’t be using for the rest of my life.

Wednesday, June 27, 2018

The plot thickens

Yesterday, after I’d done my blog, I switched the voltmeters again, soldering probes to the one that gauges battery condition. Today after about 8 hours of sunshine, I checked and the battery seemed fully charged.

Somebody had claimed that Amorphous panels were “crap” and that there was no such thing as a crysteline panel. Well, sure there is - there’s poly-crysteline and mono-crysteline. Today I ran a not too scientific test. I put the 30W Poly-crysteline panel on my watt meter for an hour and a half and it pulled in whatever it was that it pulled in. That watt meter doesn’t come with instructions. Next I put the “crap” panel on for an hour and pulled in a third of what the crysteline panel pulled in. Now adjusting for time difference and panel wattage it turns out that there’s zero difference between the panels other than Amorphos panels work better in low light than crysteline panels. I hope the person that told me my Amorphous panels were crap likes eating crow!
 Amorphous 15W panel after just one hour
Poly-Crysteline panel after 90 minutes
But the first thing that happened was a problem. I couldn’t get my external panel to connect to the electrical supply system. It transpired there was an issue with the SAE to cigarette lighter plug. I’m not sure what it was either because after disassembling it and checking the fuse then losing the spring and having to rob an old pen for a spring, it seemed to work. Judging from the sand that fell out of the thing, I’m going to hazard a guess I’d be better changing to SAE for input. It’s not urgent though. What I have will work. I also have a spare SAE to cigarette lighter converter on the way. It’s supposed to be here Saturday but it seems to have been stuck in New York for days.

To quote an old movie, “an interesting thing happened on the way to the forum”. I ran my twin extraction fans for one minute. I’d previously checked the battery level and it was all green. Fully charged. After one minute of twin 2.5A fans using a combined 5A or a sixtieth of five amp hours which is 0.083 amp hours, I checked the battery and it was out of the green into the amber. That should absolutely not be! I’m closer to nailing the problem.

I know my solar panels work. I’ve measured them and they all work well. That leaves the problem as being the battery or the charge controller. Having measured the battery as being full earlier today I’m wondering about the charge controller. What I really need to do is to test the battery. Harbor Freight sells a battery load tester. Now one of the things, thinking about Harbor Freight, that I’d love to do is to run my fuse circuit tester on everything just to see how much current is really being consumed. Trouble is, I can’t find the blessed thing! Like all the other stuff I can’t find, I’ll have to find it when I’m tidying up!

I really need to find somewhere to store all the stuff from the bus. There’re tools I don’t need to carry in the bus and supplies too. All I need is my maintainance supplies and tools. The rest is redundant now.



Tuesday, June 26, 2018

Tonight, a mystery.

A while ago I bought a voltmeter to keep track of my system here. Today it was reading 13.1v though the 3 does not show up well in the photo. I’ve been a little unimpressed with the power supplied by my 35AH battery and have been wondering just what is going on. Thus I’d ordered a voltmeter with a built in battery meter since an actual ammeter was more expensive.
Trying to fit the new meter was just a little fraught. Not only was it longer than the old voltmeter but it was also lacking any thread on the last half inch. Nit yo worry though. A 3/4 inch cable tie came in very handy. So the old voltmeter was out and the new one was in.
Pressing the button though revealed somewhat of a mystery. The battery is reading almost in the red. It should be in the green having been charging all day and not being used. 

Thinking about it, I’ll probably switch back to the old voltmeter tomorrow and solder some probes to the new meter. Then I can put the meter directly on the battery as opposed to on the output from the charge controller. I’d thought that as I can see the voltage on the controller dropping, it might be a good place to put a battery meter. I’d thought it was a direct connection. I might be wrong though.

There are several possible answers to my lack of power.
  • The charge controller is complete garbage.
  • The Harbor Freight battery is garbage.
  • There’s something draining the battery.
  • The meters are all cheap pieces of junk.
  • Putting the battery meter in the charge controller output was the wrong thing to do.
  • A combination of factors.
Tomorrow I’ll start by switching the meter back and putting probes on my fancy meter in order to see just what is going on. I’ll try the probes on my battery directly and see what happens. In fact I might make use of position two on my battery kill switch and dedicate it to my battery meter. I will get to the bottom of this! 

Monday, June 25, 2018

Interesting solar panel comparisons

As most of my readers know, my bus/motorhome has solar panels. I have two portable panels and three secured panels. They’re different. The front solar panel is black and is an Amorphous silicone panel.
The Amorphous panels seem to work better in low light but take up more room than the crystalline panels.
The crystalline panels such as this tend to produce more power in a smaller space but they need higher light levels in order to perform. In terms of longevity the crystalline panels last longer but the amount of power produced in low light levels for example cloudy days is perhaps not as good as the less efficient Amorphous panels.
In other news, today I got on with completing the wiring at the front of the bus. It all seems to work. Now I can feed solar power in through an internal or an external source and can feed the bus driving battery from an internal solar panel. Having said that I still have to make the underbus connections.

Still remaining to do on the 12v system is putting the wiring for the door controller in the right place and installing a rear solar input. I have all but the wire for the rear solar input. That means a trip to the hardware store at some point. Then I can get on with cleaning and tidying, sorting and so on.

My first trip with the bus is booked. It’s going to be in early September to a schoolbus meet near Edisto Island (yes, it is on land but I wouldn’t put it past people trying to push me in the sea). I’m looking forward to it!

Friday, June 22, 2018

Look at what arrived in the post today!

Now that is three items. On the left together with a redundant wire is my cigarette lighter socket. That goes through a small hole in the bus skirt. Wires go from that through the floor of the bus to the big box in the middle. That’s a bridge rectifier. From the bridge rectifier a wire goes to the solar controller. I do need to put a switch in between the solar panel and the bridge rectifier, however. Just so I can eliminate the chance of somebody doing something silly with excess voltages.

On the right are two 14 gauge Hopkins connectors. Those are, under current plans, redundant but as with everything redundant I usually find a need for them.

As I said, yesterday, I tidied up some wiring. I didn’t do a darned thing today but then when the temperature is close to 100, it’s hard to do anything more than the essentials and to relax. This is why everybody in South Carolina becomes a lard arse - including myself.

I realised I need a couple of things in order to complete my solar setup - two 12v cigarette lighter sockets (not like the one that’s just arrived), some wire and something to put a switch into. I have plenty spaces for switches - I just lack a box to put my switch. I used my last remaining usable box a few days ago. I have one or maybe two other boxes but they’re not suitable. During one of my previous designs of my solar system, I put too many holes in the one box for it to be usable. Still, I suppose I can try. I can do a lot with expanding foam.
Heaven alone knows where the lid has got to though I’m pretty sure I might be able to find it. The screws that hold it together might be more elusive and it might need to be glued permanently.

The two cigarette lighter sockets are a shopping trip. I have plenty spare wire. I just need to find an extra length of cable wrap. I might have some. It’s not worth a trip to Harbor Freight just for wrap though.

Once the remaining things left to be done are done it’ll be one massive tidyup operation. I’ll need somewhere to put all the tools and oh boy, I’ve really collected tools. Had I known that I could have welded using a pair of car batteries then I might just have bought car batteries rather than a welder and been thus able to use thicker welding rods. That would also have allowed me to weld aluminum which I can’t with my AC arc welder (well, I could but it’d probably spatter badly).

Remaining to do:

  • Tidy the wiring for the digital door controller. 
  • Install the two extra cigarette lighter sockets. One goes to the news switch in the cockpit. The other connects directly to the charge controller at the front,
  • Two wires from under the bus that are not used. Both go to the charge controller. The other end goes into the battery compartment and a pair of alligator clips. When the battery is not in use the alligator clips connect and a solar panel connects to the charge controller so that the batteries can be topped up or kept fresh using solar power.
  • The new cigarette lighter socket, wire and bridge rectifier feed into the charge controller at the back, giving extra power. A switch is needed for this circuit.
  • The CB coax needs to be reconnected to the coaxial connector. 
  • There’s a buzzing relay in the control console that needs attention.
  • I’d like to lower the brake pedal some but I’m not sure that it’s possible without removing the hydromax. 
  • There’s a bit of paint in the bedroom that needs touching up. I have half a gallon left.
  • I need to put the tools in a shed and my surplus supplies also.
  • The boxes of stuff that haven’t seen daylight in ten years need to be sorted through.
  • Things need to be put in drawers
  • I need to go through my clothing fairly ruthlessly. I remember why I kept some items of worn out clothing but the memories they held are not important to me any more.  
  • Testing. I need to test the water input and do a test camping session in the bus.
So, plenty to do and I didn’t do anything today! Well, I thought, and thinking is important. Thinking is what separates us from the animals and the less intelligent humans that we encounter on a daily basis. 

Thursday, June 21, 2018

Tidying up wiring

For a very long time, possibly two years maybe three I have been considering tidying the wiring for the front door. Well, the top where it mushrooms into my relay and battery pack, it’s harder to actually tidy but I might have another go at that at some future point. Currently the door controller runs off AA batteries. If I felt the urge, I’d change to D cells on the basis that they last far longer since they are of far greater capacity. Some would ask why use independent batteries when the emergency door unlocker is powered by solar. The fact is that it’s backwards - my emergency unlocker should run off lithium batteries but as the digital keypad needs constant power, that’s not an option. I would rather have three key systems - an ordinary lock on the emergency exits, a code key for use with solar power and an electric lock for the front door. Any one of those can fail and still leave me with two ways in.
The electric key lock wiring having been secured and tidied, I moved on to the bathroom. There I’d installed wires in sheath and not properly secured one section. That was on purpose because I wired an extra circuit into the system. It’s not employed but if I need extra power either in the galley or the bathroom, it’s there to provide it.
It’s all hidden away behind the shower where it won’t be bothered. Now there are a couple of bits of wiring left to be done in the cockpit. First the emergency door unlocker wire needs to be tucked out of the way inside the heater compartment and secondly I need to put in two sets of cigarette lighter sockets. The first takes power from two solar panels I might place in the windshield and feeds it to my solar batter and the second takes power from a solar panel in the windshield and feeds it to the bus battery. The bus battery wiring will involve getting under the bus again and passing a wire into the battery compartment. Then while I’m down there, I might as well install the kill switch that came with the bus. It just seems easier to reach underneath to flip a switch than to unlock the battery door to remove the cable.
Now, a piece of fun. I had a can of Great Stuff expanding foam sealant that refused to disgorge its contents. Clearing the nozzle with a twist drill bit I found the drill bit was going deeper and deeper into the can until I was almost half way down. Obviously no foam was going to be forthcoming so I did what every self-respecting American would do and put the can at the end of the backyard rifle range and shot it with some .22LR. Foam immediately spewed from the can and when it set hard I found the shape interesting so I sprayed it pink and put it online as art. I wonder whether it’ll sell.

Finally, I’m still waiting for a couple of bits to come from eBay. These likely will be my last eBay orders. I’m jolly glad to have got to the end of the bus project because until now thing bought via eBay have not been taxed. Some vandals up North decided to disrupt the process and so now one state can now charge tax on everything bought online. I just wonder how they’re going to enforce that. So, remaining to be done... Add a solar input at the rear of the bus, finish the solar input wiring at the front, today the code unlocker wiring and that should be it. I’ll need to test the fresh water inlet but can’t do that where I’m currently parked.

Next follows a lengthy process of cleaning and removing tools and supplies from the bus. Then a period of going through my stuff for things that I have no interest in now and clothes that do not fit. The question of insurance comes up to and whether to retitle or not.

Tuesday, June 19, 2018

Successes and defeats

Today I found a chunk of aluminum that happened to be the right size to make a one-piece block under the bracket on the one side of the microwave. Thus I drilled a hole and cut it to shape with my angle grinder. Interestingly my Walmart $18 angle grinder seems to cut faster than my $15 Harbor Freight angle grinder. The end result was that in a very short time I had my microwave fully secured. It’s now held down by four brackets screwed to the microwave that are in turn bolted through the countertop. That’s not going anywhere!

The next step was to mount the switch for the solar power supply. That was relatively piainless as was adding a fuse. I just used an in-line automotive fuse holder. That, was simple enough. I still have work to do at the front. I have two spare wires coming from underneath that will probably get connected to the spare charge controller. I’ll put an input from the inside to the charge controller with probably a panel inside the window. The cables below will be connected via crocodile clips to the driving battery in order to keep it fresh.
The wires on the bottom right are part of the door lock control and the plan is to tidy them away into the space underneath the switch console.

I got on and found out which wires to solder where and got a Hopkins two pin connector soldered onto the wires from my solar panels. Then having tested the panel using my solar monitor I got on with putting the other end of the Hopkins connector into the cigarette lighter plugs. Or rather, I didn’t. It turned out to be extremely fiddly and I really wasn’t feeling like very fiddly work today. It was 99F inside the bus with the ventilation off. Thus I looked around and found a cigarette lighter plug with a Hopkins adaptor ready attached. I knew I had one.
I’m probably not going to bother with this fiddly work. Micro soldering has never been my thing. There have been a few things that have turned out to be over fiddly that I’ve quietly junked. These cigarette lighter plugs are going to be another.

The other day I found some Hopkins to cigarette lighter assembleys and ordered one. That’ll arrive in due course. Meanwhile I remember I had a scrolling LED sign that got broken. I cut the cigarette lighter plug and cable off it thinking it might one day be useful. Free hot dinner to anybody that can find it for me though! I suspect it’s somewhere in the galley but I’m not sure where.

Anyway, I got the first solar panel connected and installed. Now the bus is running off 65W of solar panels with the 30W panel better placed to catch the sun.
I have a second panel and connected a Hopkins connector to that also. As can be seen, I propped both panels against the side of the bus. Being $30 panels, I can do this without worrying too much if somebody pinches them. They’re also just the right size to fit inside the windshield. I’ll have to build some kind of mount in order to put them in the windshield but that’s a simple matter of buying aluminum angle, cutting and riveting.
 Not being able at the moment to plug the panel into the bus power supply, I put my watt meter on it and proved it is definitely producing power. I don’t think much of that watt meter - it’s cheap junk but it does work. What I’d have preferred was a simpler device that didn’t consume solar power but ran off a couple of AA batteries.
It was pretty hot today. Inside the bus came in at 100F. Normally if it was 100F outside I’d have been baked out of the bus. One year it got up to 145F inside. Since I put that Rustoleum elastometric roof paint on though, that 67% reflectivity and insulation has cut the internal heat down to the heat of outside the bus. I wonder whether if I’d bought something with 85% reflectivity whether it would have been cooler in the bus than outside.
Even the official outside temperature matched the inside of the bus. This roof paint is the bees knees. It really seems to be working which is quite amazing for what is essentially a tin can.
I went to install my battery meter today and found that the voltmeter I have in place has been soldered in. I have a tendency to do that when I don’t have right-angle spade connectors. As fixing that will require soldering inside the bus, I resolved to wait for a cooler day for that.

How far off completion am I? Hard to say. I know I need to get a couple of cigarette lighter sockets. A double for the house battery side of things and a single for the driving battery side of things. I need to start tidying wiring. There are two or three places that need a little work. Other than that I’d say the bus is probably complete until the results of the first test run.

Using the ventilation and a single 30W solar panel it was noticeable how quickly the battery refilled and how long it would go. I also noticed that immediately the fans came on, though it was still 100F inside, it felt cooler. I’m onto something here!

Monday, June 18, 2018

Solutions to problems

Yesterday was one of those days when nothing seemed to work. It wasn’t restricted to me though - the lady in the grocery store in front of me managed to empty the contents of her purse onto the floor while others had crazy things happen too.

Today the temperature inside the bus with the ventilation turned off was 97F and 56% humidity. It was pretty hot. Outside it was reportedly 96F with a breeze so it felt far cooler. Still I plugged on. The  aim of the solar input is to take the output of my two 30W panels and feed my system with them. That will allow me to have the extraction fan operating full blast during daylight hours. I’m going to add another solar input toward the back of the bus in order to be able to plug in a heftier solar panel or wind generator or whatever. I’m limited to 7.5A on the stuff I have at the front of the bus. With heavier wiring at the back, I can go directly to the charge controller with more power. Extra is not planned but I’d like the opportunity without much prevarication to be able to install more.

As far as the battery goes, 35AH is plenty. If I were to add extra battery capacity then I would not add another lead-acid battery. I’d likely add a similarly sized but greater capacity lithium battery.

After having problems with the MC4 connectors yesterday, I had no such problems today. I took a totally different tack and examined the connectors carefully.
Crimping the wings on the backs of the connectors are supposed in some miraculous way to secure the wire to the pin. I tried that yesterday and couldn’t get the pins into the plugs properly. Today I cut the perishing wings off and simply soldered my wires to the plug for a far better connection. This involved tinning the wires with my electric soldering iron then using my gas torch to solder the wire into the pin.
As can be seen, it worked quite well. Now I don’t have to butcher the connectors on the solar panels. Popping the wires into the MC4 plastic was then quite easy and took no time at all. I was then at a stop because I’d done all I really could or so I thought with the panel wiring.

Yesterday I ordered a set of heavier Hopkins connectors and a Hopkins to cigarette lighter plug adaptor. I needn’t have bothered because I found today that my existing spare Hopkins connectors are 16 gauge. That will handle 10-12 amps fairly readily. Each panel is putting out 30 watts or 2.5A. I probably way overdid it with the wiring but I like to be sure with wiring. I will have a go tomorrow at wiring the existing Hopkins connectors to my cigarette lighter plug and my wires from my solar cable.

My solar cable wires are long at 15 feet but I figured that would be good to pass under the bus and prop up on the other side. There’s also an opportunity to add some kind of clamp and fasten the panels to the mirror arms while I’m parked or even to put the panels inside the windshield.
The next thing I did was to fill the empty spaces inside the switch box with expanding foam. I didn’t have any cable strain relief in place so expanding foam should do the job reasonably well. This will be my switch box. The white is the common and the two reds are the inputs. I will deploy this at the front of the bus to switch the solar input off or on for internal or external plugins. I’ll put a pair of cigarette lighter sockets inside the bus to take the output from the solar panels if they’re in the windshield. The switch has three positions - on for outside and off for inside, off for inside and on for outside and off for both. It’ll stop meddlers from trying to mess with the system as will the fuse I’m installing.

I would have installed the switch box and wired the underbus plugin to it but had to wait for the expanding form to cure. Thus I got on with the next project - securing the microwave. That was pretty straightforward to be honest. I put the four brackets on, drilled the four holes in the countertop and spaced the brackets off the countertop with stainless steel washers. I actually ran out of washers. I should have bought 6 packets instead of just 4. Thus the microwave is bolted securely with three brackets instead of all four.
As can be seen, the theory is simple - a stack of washers and a bolt. Bolting was fun though as the top of the bolt was very close to the edge of the microwave.
I had to get quite creative using several extenders on the cordless drill in order to reach while I had my hand under the counter, holding the nut in a deep socket held via an adaptor in my interchangeable bit screwdriver. I’ll get the washers on my next trip to Lowes (hiss spit).

If at any time I write “Lowes” without adding “hiss, spit” please remind me to add “hiss, spit”. This refers to a time about two years ago when Lowes served me poorly and rudely. Since then they have just been “hiss, spit” as far as I’m concerned. I would have taken my money elsewhere but for the fact Home Depot is several miles further away and going there would hit my bottom dollar.

Arriving in the post yesterday were the next parts of the strap system I’d designed to hold the microwave in place. That was all ordered before I went with my newer system of steel brackets bolted to the microwave. Also arriving in the post was my latest battery monitor. I put voltmeters on my USB charging units but then decided I needed a battery meter as well so I bought one back in May. It arrived today and I’ll probably install it tomorrow. It should give me a better idea of the state of the underbus battery. At the moment that’s reading 13.1V but if I put the light on and the USB charger then it drops to 12.7V. I need something just a shade more accurate though I have a feeling battery level management is more of a witches cauldron than anything accurate.

I’m anticipating being able to use my 12v input within the next few days. As for the internal input then I still need to buy a cigarette lighter socket. I’m not sure why I didn’t just put a double socket on the side of the bus rather than using a socket doubler. Still, if I put the rear socket on then that’s probably not important.

How complete is the bus? The rear solar input is an optional extra that I’m adding. The microwave needs one to two packs of stainless steel washers. The solar input switch needs to be installed and wired and I need to buy a cigarette lighter socket. Other than that I need to tidy the wiring in a few places and it’s done. It needs a test run to see how well it all works and to see what if any modifications are needed.

Sunday, June 17, 2018

Problems looking for solutions

Today I looked into both extending the solar power cords on my solar panels and installing the microwave. I started by working on the solar panels before having to give up on that for the day. It was one of those days when nothing seemed to go right.
Looking up the correct gauge for my wires it seems that I need 14 gauge. Thus, I got some 14 gauge and found it would not fit into the MC4 connectors nor into the cigarette lighter plug. No matter how hard I tried, I just could not get it to fit. I’ll probably have to put thinner wire (which is not recommended for the amperage of solar panel in use).
Looking at the connector on the back of the solar panel, the wires are undersized there too. I’m not a great fan of the junction box either. So, I’ll probably end up doing what I should darned well have done a month or so back - cutting the MC4 connectors off and soldering my new cable into place. Then I’ll solder a Hopkins connector on the end of that and a Hopkins connector onto the cigarette lighter plug. The wires on the Hopkins connector are a bit light but honestly I trust my soldering far more than the flimsy MC4 connectors.

Putting the microwave in wasn’t as straightforward as it could have been either. I’d picked up some stainless washers and a vinyl tile. The vinyl tile was to stop wet under the microwave from rotting the wood of the countertop. Unfortunately when I put the tile down I put it in slightly the wrong place and of course it’s self adhesive. On boy, things really aren’t going well today!
Needless to say, I can work with the microwave where it is but if I can lift the tile, I will and I’ll move it succiciently that it’s on the right pace. As you can see, the tile will catch drips and splashes from the microwave.
The plan is to secure 4 brackets - two at the back and one on each side of the microwave. It turned out that the bolts put in by the maker are long enough that I can go through the bracket and secure the microwave. A pile of stainless steel washers spaces the bracket off the countertop and a stainless steel bolt will secure the bracket to the countertop. Four bolts and brackets should keep the microwave in place and if anybody asks, it’s definitely built-in

So, the plan with the microwave is to move it a couple of inches to the left if possible. I might have underestimated the number of stainless washers needed so I might need more. I’d forgotten that the floor tile would have thickness.

The plan with the solar panels is to throw out those silly MC4 connectors and to solder longer wires to the provided wires then to solder a Hopkins connector to the end since I already use Hopkins connectors. Then I’ll put a Hopkins connector on my cigarette lighter plug. That’ll be far easier to solder. I just have to remember where I put my Hopkins connectors.

So the upshot was nothing of any substance happened despite having bought about $20 worth of wire plus about $10 of other bits and pieces.

Sunday, June 10, 2018

Several advances all at once (maybe)

Over the period since my last blog entry I have done several things, none of which was big enough to merit a blog article though. Thus, today you get all the juicy, intimate and dare-I-say-it naughty bits.

A few days ago I worked on my digital door unlocker. That’s now in place and functioning. In fact I went beyond the original plan by including an alarm that sounds when the door unlocker has been used. My regular key lock works just fine and now I have an emergency unlocking keypad in use for times when I don’t have access to my keys.
That’s the magic that makes everything happen. Two relays and a button. When the digital codeock has not been used, power flows from my key door unlocker through the relays. The key unlocker works off 10x AA batteries and they last a good long time. When the digital door unlocker is active, power from the solar battery is used. That operates the right hand relay which cuts off the key unlocker circuit and powers the door unlocker. The button operates the left hand relay, cutting off both the digital unlocker and the key unlocker and closes the door unlocker. That way everything is failsafe.
And there you can see the digital door unlocker installed. When the correct code is punched in, the door unlocks and at the same time, a truly ear-piercing alarm sounds. Everybody within 100 yards will see what’s going on! It’s just an emergency unlocker with a few safety precautions.

The wiring doesn’t look that tidy and I’ll have to tape it properly and tuck it out of sight. When people see bundles of untidy wire they all scream “unsafe” but the reality is what they can’t see is the untidy bundles of wire behind panels. I have never ever seen wire that looked remotely tidy in any vehicle.
I had to do some painting on a derelict mobile home that I’m renovating. Thus I located my paint roller and tray from when I put the elastometric paint on the roof of my bus. The paint peeled out of the tray in a very solid, very flexible, very tough sheet. This is that paint. It’s possible to see that it has turned into a very good waterproof membrane. As far as its insulating properties go, it has already been established that this membrane keeps the bus internal temperature very much closer to the outside temperature.
Having seen the “welcome” signs people seem to put on their bus steps, I went the other way and put a “go away” sign. It goes together with the prison bus look of my bus. The text of the sign is copied from the first two lines of the Groom Lake /Area 51 sign. I figured it looked more official and in keeping with the looks of my bus. I really relish my privacy and being on my own for periods of time. I spent too long in a place where I was screamed at, yelled at, hit, lied to and generally abused both physically and mentally. If this keeps the bullies away, I’m happy.
My next little task was to get some stencils and spray “Max 56 MPH” on the back bumper. I don’t normally get problems from other drivers, driving a big bus but there are some. I figured that might help. I did want to put 55 but there was only one of each number in the set. Likewise there was only one M so the other M is an upside down W. Because the stencil wouldn’t lie flat against the bumper I had to spray through the stencil and the spray has blurred the outside of the lettering. Thus today I sprayed it black as I’d found I still have a small roller and tray. I can apply with a roller - that will be far more satisfactory! I decided also to move the painting to the left side of the bumper anyway.
A small job but a necessary one. I’d not had a fuse on my solar panels before so I spent a few minutes installing one. As can be seen from the red color, it’s a 10A fuse. I doubt I’ll need more. My regular 35W of panels is about 3A and my additional 60W panels come to 5A for a grand total of a shade under 8A. At 95W total amperage would be 7.92A - too much for the next fuse down with is 7.5A.
Today I had a whole load of fun putting this box together It’s going to go on the positive (or negative) side of my extra solar power. I put a 12v cigarette lighter socket under the bus to plug in, extrenal solar input. Many solar panels come with 12V adaptors but with the usual Murphey’s law, my twin 30W panels came with totally different connectors.  Anyway, the switch is three way - on, off, on. That means I can have the external input on or put the panels inside the windshield and plug them in on the inside of the bus. I will, of course be putting a fuse between the switch and the solar collection hub. I figure a 5A or maybe a 7.5A fuse will be best. Again, I’m sticking with automotive fuses.
My plan had been to secure the wires etc inside the switch box by filling vacant space with foam sealant. That was not to be, however. I picked up my can of great stuff and found the nozzle seemed to be clogged. I cleared it with a 1/8th drill bit held between my fingers. Interestingly I went further and further down into the can without even hearing a hiss of gas. When I pulled the bit out I realised I’d gone 6 inches into the can with no release of gas or sealant. That meant that the gas had all leaked out.

Because I’m inquisitive like that, I pulled out my .177 air pistol and popped a .177 pellet into the side of the can. Nothing happened immediately then I noticed a small bead of foam. I put the can down and 5 minutes later the foam was really beginning to ooze out. I’m assuming because air had got in, it was beginning to expand.
What I didn’t expect when the foam oozed out was to see a pale looking Poppa Smurf riding the can. Still, I suppose he’s better out than in!