Home Power 099 - 2004.02
Home Power 099 - 2004.02
Home Power 099 - 2004.02
Issue 99
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Alternative Solar Products California
Toll Free: 800.229.7652
Phone: 909.308.2366
E-mail: mark@alternativesolar.com
Internet: www.alternativesolar.com
Atlantic Solar Products, Inc. Maryland
Toll Free: 800.807.2857
Phone: 410.686.2500
E-mail: mail@atlanticsolar.com
Internet: www.atlanticsolar.com
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HP99
contents
14
off-grid paradise
Ed Marue
A little log cabin in the Idaho wilderness gets a face-lift and a
modern, efficient, and wilderness-friendly solar-electric system.
22
PV system grid-tied
Greg Bundros
Can a grid-intertied solar-electric system be cost effective on the
foggy coast of Northern California?... Yes!
30
efficient greenhouse
Steve & Carol Moore
An organic family farm turns to the sun, and away from fossil fuels,
to design a simple and powerful greenhouse that produces all winter.
38
polar power
Tracy Dahl
In some environments, only renewable energy makes sense.
An Arctic training facility depends on the sun and wind.
48
thermoelectric power
Bjarni Thor Hafsteinsson & Arni Geirsson
Electricity straight from heat? Thermoelectric generators produce
energy for homes in Iceland from geothermal and other sources.
Regulars
On the Cover
Carol and Steve Moore
harvest veggies year-round
from their award winning
greenhouse.
10
From Us to You
Linda Pinkham
Intro to natural building.
96
102
Code Corner
John Wiles
Common mistakes and
how to avoid them.
106
Independent
Power Providers
Don Loweburg
Real cause of blackouts.
112
56
Michael Welch
Not in any backyard.
hydro wizard
116
Malcolm Terence
natural building
118
72
120
John Gulland
82
Joe Schwartz
Sinergex PureSine 600 sine wave inverter.
88
136
hot air
Chuck Marken
Writing for
Home Power
124
RE Happenings
128
Letters to
Home Power
140
Q&A
142
Readers
Marketplace
144
Advertisers Index
Mike Brown
The nuts and bolts of nuts and boltsdefining fasteners.
www.homepower.com
HP Subscription
Form
110
98
Ozonal Notes
Richard Perez
Off-grid communications.
80
REview
wood heat
In many locations, burning wood for heat is common. Done
correctly, it can be appropriately sustainable and environmentally
friendly.
Word Power
Ian Woofenden
Power factor.
62
Power Politics
from us to you
HP staff
Publisher Richard Perez
Publisher &
Business Manager Karen Perez
CEO &
Technical Editor Joe Schwartz
Advertising Manager Connie Said
Marketing Director Scott Russell
Customer Service
& Circulation Marika Kempa
Shannon Ryan
Managing Editor Linda Pinkham
Most of us probably remember the story of the three little pigs. Since
early childhood, we have been conditioned to believe that building a house
out of straw is sheer folly. While the house built of sticks didnt fare any
better in the fable, stick-framed walls nevertheless became the predominant
residential building method in the United States. In modern times, the
outcome of this fable would be different. A straw bale home is warm and
cozy, and keeps out the huffing and puffing of cold winter winds, while
reducing environmental impact.
Last fall, I participated in Solar Energy Internationals (SEI) Solar Home
Design online course. Through that course, I learned that modern
technology, innovative recycled materials, new methods, revived historic
techniques, and local materials have expanded the scope of building
comfortable and sustainable homes.
Green building encompasses a vast and loosely defined field of
methodologies, principles, building materials, and creative structures. What
all variations of green building have in common is efficient homes aimed at
minimizing environmental impact.
With this issue, we are adding a new focus on green building in Home
Power. We will be publishing articles covering various aspects of natural
construction on a regular basis. We are excited to have this new emphasis
shepherded by Rachel Ware, Laurie Stone, and Johnny Weiss from SEI. We
think you will find information that will be useful to you, whether you are
building a new home or retrofitting an existing structure. May you stay
warm and cozy, keeping the wolves of winter away, now and forever after.
-Linda Pinkham for the Home Power crew
Think About It
"The scarcest resource is not oil, metals, clean air, capital, labor, or technology.
It is our willingness to listen to each other and learn from each other
and to seek the truth rather than seek to be right."
Donella Meadows, (19412001), founder of the Sustainability Institute
HP access
Home Power, Inc.
PO Box 520, Ashland, OR 97520 USA
Phone: 800-707-6585 or 541-512-0201
Fax: 541-512-0343
hp@homepower.com
letters@homepower.com
Subscriptions, Back Issues, & Other
Products: Marika and Shannon
subscription@homepower.com
Copyright 2004 Home Power, Inc. All rights reserved. Contents may not be reprinted or otherwise reproduced
without written permission. While Home Power magazine strives for clarity and accuracy, we assume no responsibility
or liability for the use of this information.
Legal: Home Power (ISSN 1050-2416) is published bi-monthly for $22.50 per year at PO Box 520, Ashland, OR 97520.
International surface subscription for US$30. Periodicals postage paid at Ashland, OR, and at additional mailing offices.
POSTMASTER send address corrections to Home Power, PO Box 520, Ashland, OR 97520.
Paper and Ink Data: Cover paper is Aero Gloss, a 100#, 10% recycled (postconsumer-waste), elemental chlorine-free
paper, manufactured by Sappi Fine Paper. Interior paper is Connection Gloss, a 50#, 80% postconsumer-waste,
elemental chlorine-free paper, manufactured by Madison International, an environmentally responsible mill based in
Alsip, IL. Printed using low VOC vegetable-based inks. Printed by St. Croix Press, Inc., New Richmond, WI.
10
www.homepower.com
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Sta No
Bergey
1000 Watt Home Wind Turbine
24 VDC
Battery Charging
The Bergey XL.1 24 VDC battery charging wind system is the most technically
advanced small wind turbine on the market today. It provides superior energy
production performance with the Tornado Tuff ruggedness that has made
Bergey turbines best sellers since 1980. And, best of all, the XL.1 is value priced
to give you the most bang for your buck.
The XL.1 now features an upgraded PowerCenter controller that idles the
rotor once the batteries are full (Warning: Be prepared to spend hours
flipping lights on and off to cause the rotor to speed up or slow down.
Highly addictive to techies.) and provides a convenient push button brake
function. In addition, we doubled the dump load capacity (to 60A) and gave
it proportional (PWM) control to more accurately maintain battery voltage,
added a wattmeter function, made customizing set-points a snap, and
added a polarity checker for the wind and PV inputs.
Compare features, performance, price, reputation, and warranties. We think
you will find that the Bergey XL.1 is the clear choice for your home power
system. Get product information and find a dealer near you by visiting our
web site: www.bergey.com.
PowerCenter Controller
60A Wind Regulator
30A Solar Regulator
60A Dump Load Control
Circuit
Voltage Booster for Low Winds
Battery and System Status
LEDs
WindPower
SIMPLICITYRELIABILITYPERFORMANCE
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2002 Bergey Windpower
Solar Comfort
in the Idaho
Wilderness
Ed Marue
2004 Ed Marue
ur first exposure to the wild and scenic Salmon River in remote central Idaho was
on an inflatable kayak trip in 1979. My wife Joyce and I have returned nearly every
summer to paddle the rivers of Idaho, and in particular our favorite section of the main
fork of the Salmon. On the river, being isolated from all forms of contact with the outside
world, was the perfect escape from the rigors and pressures of the business world, and
the ideal place to refresh the spirit and rejuvenate the mind.
14
o f f - g r i d paradise
The Marue homestead, looking north from the Wild and Scenic Salmon Rivers south bank.
Inset (previous page)a closer look at the homesteads PV array, garage (left), and log home (right).
www.homepower.com
15
o f f - g r i d paradise
Technical
Specifications
System Overview
System type: Off-grid PV
System location: Colson Creek, Idaho
Solar resource: 5 average annual peak sun hours
Production: 90 AC KWH per month average
Photovoltaics
The electronics and vented battery box are located in the garage.
The site is 33 miles (53 km) and over US$3 million from
the utility grid, and with the cabin facing the river
running east-west, it had the perfect orientation for a PV
system. Abundant water comes from Colson Creek,
originating at a small manmade dam about a half-mile up
from the river. The 15 or so residents of the area take full
advantage of the water supply and produce copious
amounts of fresh fruits and vegetables on riverside
gardens. And while a few lucky residents are able to get
some hydropower from the creek, the only available
utilities are propane delivery and a telephone line.
Balance of System
Charge controller: Xantrex C60, PWM
Inverter: Xantrex SW4024, 24 VDC nominal input,
120 VAC nominal output
System performance metering: Xantrex TM500 AH
meter
Engine generator: Generac 04389-1, 7 KW, 240 VAC
nominal output, 80100 hours average annual run
time
Energy Storage
Fixer Upper
We spent our first summer rebuilding the small 1,000
square foot (93 m2), two bedroom, single bath cabin. The
project was extensive, since it was literally from the dirt
up. Many of the original floor joists were rotted from past
years water leaks, and had to be replaced. A complete
new kitchen was constructed, including new cabinets, a
new Servel propane refrigerator, and a basic four-burner
propane range and oven. The only added extra was an
energy efficient dishwasher. The bathroom was gutted,
and a new shower was constructed along with a new sink,
vanity, and toilet.
A laundry facility was created that included a
compact, propane-fired, stacked washer and dryer unit.
The old-style, bulky, tank water heater was replaced with
an efficient Aquastar, propane, on-demand, tankless unit.
Heating is provided by the original, centrally located,
wood burning stove with the addition of a small 10,000
BTU propane wall heater for those cool mornings when
the woodstove would be overkill.
Cooling the cabin after a hot summer day is simple.
After the sun goes down, we open the windows at both
ends of the house and allow the breeze blowing down
Colson Creek to flow through and cool things off. We are
considering adding a small air conditioning unit, since we
have sufficient excess energy during the hottest months of
July and August. But actually, we really do not spend
16
o f f - g r i d paradise
Photovoltaics: Eight Kyocera KC120-1, 120 W each; wired for 960 W total at 24 VDC
AC Mains Panel:
120 VAC, 40 A breaker
to household loads
Power to
Wattsun Tracker
PV
Combiner
Box:
15 A fuses
Earth
Ground
DC
Lightning
Arrestor
Charge
Controller:
Xantrex
C60, 60 A,
PWM
AC
Lightning
Arrestor
G
N
H
H N G
Autotransformer:
Xantrex T240
DC Disconnect:
Xantrex DC250,
250 A main
breaker, 60 A PV
breaker
Fuse:
2A
Earth
Ground
Amp-Hour
Meter:
Xantrex
TM500
H
H
G
GUARDIAN
Earth
Ground
Propane Generator:
Generac 04389-1, 7 KW, 240 VAC
Batteries:
Eight Rolls S-530, flooded lead-acid, 530 AH at 6 V, wired for 1,060 AH at 24 VDC
Note: All numbers are rated, manufacturers specifications, or nominal unless otherwise specified.
PV System Design
Having a background in physics and engineering, I
planned to do the entire PV system project myself, with
minimal help from outside sources. All of the knowledge
needed to plan, design, and construct the system was
derived from reading articles in Home Power, and tracking
reference material and sources originating from the
magazine. Since discovering HP three years ago, I have read
nearly every article from beginning to end.
www.homepower.com
17
o f f - g r i d paradise
of a Wattsun AZ-125 dual-axis tracker
increases output and extends our solar
window somewhat.
My philosophy for electronic
equipment is pretty straightforward.
Reliability
is
very
important,
particularly in a remote location. Go
with proven products and derate
appropriately. We essentially selected
Xantrex products, including an
SW4024
inverter,
C60
charge
controller, TM500 battery status
monitor, and appropriate disconnects,
breakers, and lightning protection.
For a backup generator, I selected a
Generac, 7 kilowatt, propane-fueled
unit. While this generator was
designed for emergency backup for
grid-tied applications and has features
Under Idahos blue skies, the assembled Wattsun tracker is ready for the PVs.
0.50
1.00
0.50
5.00
0.05
0.75
24.00
0.05
0.05
2.20
1.23
0.15
3.00
0.05
1.00
4
4
7
7
7
3
7
2
2
7
7
4
7
2
7
142.9
285.7
750.0
450.0
20.0
225.0
96.0
17.1
5.0
55.0
159.9
102.9
105.0
10.7
100.0
Total Daily WH
2,525.2
2,777.7
111.1
133.3
26.7
3.8
8.0
533.3
1,066.6
2.0
8.0
18
Installation
Once the system was designed, I shopped the Internet
over the winter for the best prices, and accumulated all the
materials before heading to Idaho in April 2003.
Construction of the PV system was concurrent with the
building of a log garage/shop and a deck around the house.
Initially, excavators and cement crews worked on all three
projects simultaneously. Later, I built the deck and installed
the PV system, while a local construction company finished
the garage.
The Wattsun tracker was installed on top of a 10 foot
(3 m) tall, 6 inch (15 cm) diameter, galvanized, Schedule 40
pipe. This pipe was set in a foundation block of reinforced
concrete that is 4 by 4 by 31/2 feet (1.2 x 1.2 x 1 m). This was
a little more than 2 yards of concrete, and more than
required by the calculations of a registered civil engineer.
The garage construction crew helped me hoist the
Wattsun gear head onto the top of the pole. I was able to
construct the frames, install the PV panels, and wire the
circuits by myself. The documentation that came with the
tracker kit proved adequate to complete the installation in a
little more than a day. Once the garage was completed, the
electrical equipment was installed on a wall about 25 feet
(7.6 m) from the PV tracker pole.
On the AC side, appropriate breakers and enclosures were
installed for overcurrent protection. Care was taken to bond
ground rods located at the house and generator to a single
point in the DC disconnect box. Lightning suppressors were
o f f - g r i d paradise
placed at both the DC and AC sides. The Xantrex manuals and
literature were complete enough to accomplish the
installations successfully without help from outside sources. I
particularly liked the technical sections of the Xantrex inverter
manual, which explain the theory of operation, increasing my
overall knowledge of how the system functions.
The batteries were installed in an insulated and vented
box constructed close to the DC disconnect and inverter.
Two inches (5 cm) of Styrofoam insulation should protect
the batteries from freezing, since the winters at Colson
Creek are rather mild, rarely getting to zero. The battery box
was constructed out of plywood with a hinged lid like a
freezer chest. I should have built the box with access
through a side, to avoid hoisting each 130 pound battery
over the top of the box by myself.
Connecting the Generac generator was a bit of a
challenge, since this unit was designed for grid-tie
applications, with no terminations provided for remote
manual control. Generac was unhelpfulmy e-mail request
to them was returned with their concern that I might hurt
myself or harm my property. It did not take much to figure
out a way to interrupt a circuit on the manual start/stop
switch of the Generac, and connected it to the generator
control relay of the inverter, leaving the SW4024 in complete
control of the generators operation.
Performance
After completing construction of the system and doublechecking all the wiring, the switch was turned and
everything came to life. The only glitch was that the azimuth
control of the tracker went the wrong way. I quickly figured
out that the azimuth motor polarity was reversed, and it
took no time to correct the problem.
In the first few weeks of operation, I fine-tuned the
programming of the inverter and battery monitor. So far,
through last summer and fall, the deepest the batteries have
been discharged overnight is 8 percent, taking less than a
Future Considerations
19
o f f - g r i d paradise
Marue PV System Costs
Item
8 Kyocera KC120 modules
Xantrex SW4024 inverter
Generac 04389-1 generator
Cost (US$)
$3,512
2,499
2,275
1,926
1,592
447
425
400
289
241
191
181
179
168
161
157
136
94
50
35
35
30
23
20
16
$15,081
ENERGY VIEWER
Access
Ed & Joyce Marue, 74 Chinook Dr., Shoup, ID 83469
208-394-2197 7570 N. Calle Sin Controversia, Tucson, AZ
85718 520-742-7247 emarue@comcast.net
Earth Solar, Dave Regal, 6315 Canyon Dr., Amarillo, TX
79110 800-329-3283 or 806-359-9005 Fax: 806-355-0585
dave@earthsolar.com www.earthsolar.com System
components
The Natural House: A Complete Guide to Healthy, EnergyEfficient Environmental Homes, Daniel D. Chiras, Paperback,
480 pages, ISBN 1-890132-57-8, US$35 from Chelsea Green
Publishing Company, PO Box 428, White River Junction,
20
Financially,
environmentally,
it pays to be green.
Evergreen.
The Johnson family was tired of rate increases
from their electric company and concerned
about pollution from power plants.
They decided to generate their own
electricity by installing Evergreen Solar
panels with patented String Ribbon
technology. Evergreen Solar panels
reduce the impact of rate increases on
the Johnsons budget and reduce
pollution for everyone. Plus, when the
Johnsons generate more electricity than they
need, they can sell the excess back to their
utilityand watch their meter spin backwards.
They even saved on installation costs by taking
advantage of tax credits and state rebates. So
think ever green and generate your own power.
Visit evergreensolar.com to see how your
family can save money on energy and help
the environment.
866.357.2221
www.evergreensolar.com
HP_V5.1
Greg Bundros
2004 Greg Bundros
The author and his daughter Joanna installed the 24 PV panels on the garage and carport roofs.
22
PV system grid-tied
Our goal was to maximize the use of a single inverter in
hopes of meeting 65 to 75 percent of our electricity needs.
Because the incentive program made this purchase affordable,
I decided not to skimp too much on cost. There are many good
solar-electric panels on the market today, but the Siemens
(now Shell Solar) seemed to fit our needs best. They are a high
efficiency, monocrystalline module, and they come with a 25
year warranty. They also work well under a wide temperature
range. Everyone I spoke with and all the literature I read voted
strongly for the Sunny Boy inverter, an efficient, reliable, easyto-install, batteryless, grid-intertie unit made by SMA.
While seasonal angle adjustments can increase solar
output by about 5 percent at our location, I decided to
mount the PV arrays at the fixed slope of our garage roof so
they were unobtrusive. The roof pitch is 8:12 (34 degrees), so
I felt it was close enough to our 41 degree latitude. The
UniRac SolarMount racks were a perfect fit for us, because I
wanted to rack panels individually on the roof instead of on
the ground. The racks are made of high quality aluminum
with accurately machined channels, and come with stainless
steel hardware. The racks assemble easily, and the
companys technical support staff is superb.
We purchased the system components through Schott
Applied Power Corporation, now Alternative Energy
Engineering, located about 80 miles (130 km) south of us in
Redway, California. These folks have been in the renewable
energy business for more than 20 years, supplying people
with both off-grid and utility-intertie renewable energy
systems. They are pros. Brian Teitelbaum was extremely
friendly, knowledgeable, and an incredible resource.
I installed the system myself. Peter Brant, an electrical
contractor, agreed to oversee the installation. Peter is a staunch
supporter of renewable energy, and is enthusiastic and
knowledgeable. My 16-year-old daughter Joanna and I
installed all 24 panels on the garage roof in two days.
Installing the inverter, running conduit, and pulling wire
required another three days of work. The installation was
straightforward and fun.
$22,039
100.0%
-$10,112
-1,700
-45.9%
-7.7%
$10,227
46.4%
www.homepower.com
23
PV system grid-tied
The time-of-use rate schedule (TOU) establishes the
value for electricity based on the period of the year and the
time of day electricity is used (or produced). Heres how it
works. The year is divided into summer and winter periods,
and the day into peak and off-peak hours. The summer
period runs from May 1st to October 30th. The winter
period is the other half of the year. Peak hours, regardless of
period, are weekdays from noon until 6 PM. Off-peak hours
are the remaining weekday and weekend hours.
These are important points. With TOU, the price for
electricity (whether you consume it or produce it) during
peak hours of the summer period is three times more than
for any other time. The price is also higher for peak hours
during the winter period, but it is only a few cents more
than off-peak hours. The price for electricity during the offpeak hours throughout the year remains the same and is less
than the general rate schedule.
So the TOU rates explain the apparent contradiction
mentioned earlier, because the value of the electricity you
produce can make up for not producing all that you
consume. In other words, for optimum financial gain, you
want to limit your electricity use and maximize your
electricity production during peak hours, especially during
the summer period.
Monthly Energy
Consumption & Sources
600
500
400
KWH
300
200
100
0
-100
-200
Apr.
Jun.
PV
Aug.
Grid
Oct.
Dec.
Feb.
Home Use
24
PV system grid-tied
Photovoltaics: Twenty-four Siemens SM110, 110 W each; wired for 2,640 W total at 288 VDC
DC Disconnect (30 A)
& PV Combiner Box (10 A)
KWH
Meter
Inverter Subpanel
(100 A):
30 A breakers to
inverter circuit
DC
Lightning
Arrestor
Inverter:
SMA Sunny Boy SB2500U,
2,500 W, 600 VDC maximum
input, 240 VAC output, MPPT,
utility interactive
AC Mains Panel:
100 A breakers to
subpanel
To Utility Grid:
240 VAC
Lockable
Disconnect
(100 A)
H
H
G
AC Lightning Arrestor
Earth
Ground
Note: All numbers are rated, manufacturers specifications, or nominal unless otherwise specified.
400
300
200
100
0
-100
-200
-300
Apr.
Jun.
Aug.
Peak Hours
Oct.
Dec.
Feb.
Off-Peak Hours
www.homepower.com
25
PV system grid-tied
Monthly Value of PV &
Running Balance Owed
to Utility
Average Daily
PV Production & Weather
16
$50
14
12
KWH
$0
KWH
-$50
-$100
10
8
6
4
-$150
2
0
-$200
Clear
-$250
Apr.
Jun.
Aug.
Off Peak
Oct.
Peak
Dec.
Feb.
Entire Year
Partly
Cloudy
Mostly
Cloudy
Summer Period
Cloudy
Rain
Winter Period
Balance
26
No More Excuses
Was installing the PV system a cost-effective
investment? I sure think so. Sure, the payback will take
some time, but what good things in life dont? Our society
purchases new cars and similarly high priced consumer
goods on a regular basis. Think about it. For half the price of
a new modestly priced car, you can produce a significant
portion of your electricity for the next 20 to 30 years.
Global energy demand will increase significantly as
populations and nations flourish. Nonrenewable energy
resources will someday be depleted. We have the ability to
PV system grid-tied
Technical
Specifications
System Overview
System type: Batteryless, grid-intertie system
System location: Fieldbrook, California
Solar resource: 4.4 average annual peak sun
hours
Production: 277 AC KWH per month average
Percentage KWH offset by PV system: 79
percent
Percent utility cost offset by PV system: 100
percent
Photovoltaics
Modules: 24 Siemens SM110, 110 W STC, 24 VDC
nominal
Array: Two, 12 module series strings, 1,320 W STC
each, 2,640 W STC total, 288 VDC nominal
Array combiner box: Xantrex TCB-10 with 10 A
fuses
Array disconnect: GE heavy duty safety switch, NP
266212-E, 30 A
Array installation: UniRac Solar mounts on
south-facing roof, 34 degree tilt
Balance of System
Inverter: SMA Sunny Boy SB2500U, up to 600
VDC input, 240 VAC nominal output, 250 to 600
VDC MPPT voltage window
System performance metering: Built-in inverter
display
Access
Greg Bundros, 388 Rock Pit Rd., Fieldbrook, CA 95519
707-839-3553 gbundros@reninet.com
Peter Brant, Brant Electric, PO Box 66, Arcata, CA 95518
707-822-3256 Fax: 707-826-1180 pbrant@foggy.net
Electrician
www.homepower.com
27
Dealers Wanted
for North and
South America
www.fronius.com
Winter Food
Production in
Pennsylvania
without Fossil
Fuels!
A rainbow over Steve and Carols solar powered greenhouse marks their pot of goldsustainable food production.
Thirty years ago, we started farming as a family with the principles of organic
agriculture and limited fossil fuel use. This ethic stemmed both from our concern
for the environment and from our interest in self-sufficiency.
We used horse power for the first 26 years, and moved on to hand power with
the incredibly efficient Grow Biointensive gardening technique. As farmers and
market gardeners, we needed continual cash flow, and decided to use a seasonal
extension of tomato growing for a niche market. Before we knew what had
happened, we were growing tomatoes year-round and burning lots of fossil fuel to
raise tomatoes in the winter. We had an epiphany as we looked at fuel consumption
and asked, How did we get so far from our mark? How can we avoid getting to
this place again? Where should we go from here?
30
efficient greenhouse
Simple Goals
We decided to start with a few
simple goals to help us stay focused as
we changed our season extension plan.
They were:
Accept as much natural energy as
possible
Lose as little energy as possible
Store an adequate amount of energy
Keep things simple (both mechanically and managerially)
Do it with a payback (and minimal
risk)
We also wanted the freshest, most
nutritious food for our family (as well
as our markets). We were tired of the
high labor and energy intensive
preserving methods, which only led to
compromised nutrition anyway.
These were the beginning ideas of
our passive solar greenhouse. Whether
by encouragement or challenge, we
moved forward with research and
experimentation until we could
produce food for market and our table.
The main idea was embarrassingly
simpleif one blanket doesnt keep
you warm, add another. In our case, we
added grow tunnels inside one of our
Photo by Susan Lerner, www.SusanLernerPhoto.com.
big greenhouse structures.
The success of these greenhouses
Josh, Sarah, Carol, and Steve Moore in front of their solar powered greenhouse.
was noticed by the Pennsylvania
Environmental Resource Center, which
voluntarily funded the purchasing of
Here in southeast Pennsylvania, winters often bring a
microclimate monitoring equipment. The data we gathered
week of subzero (F) temperatures, and sometimes days and
allowed us to accelerate our learning curve. As a result, we
weeks that never get above 32F (0C). We can now grow
now use greenhouse perimeter and interior pathway
more than a dozen cold-tolerant crops right through the
insulation; new, more efficient interior layouts; and different
dead of winter. In addition to improved winter production,
films for the greenhouse and inner covers.
our new system provides summer production in
spring, and summer crops as late as Christmas.
Design Considerations
June 21
Sun Angle
Rigid Foam
Insulation
Inner Cover
1/2" EMT
Conduit
Inner
Cover
90 degrees
to Plastic
Dec. 21
Sun Angle
Polyethylene
Pipe
22 oF Above Outsides
Nighttime Lows in all Beds
Brick
Pavers
www.homepower.com
31
efficient greenhouse
Testing Greenhouse
Materials
We are constantly seeking to improve the
performance of our greenhouses. For the winter of
20022003, we received a small grant from the
Pennsylvania Vegetable Growers and Mid-Atlantic
Vegetable Growers Association to try various inner
covers, outer covers, and combinations. The results
(shown in the table) indicate that the best retention of
heat is a double layer of polyethylene over the big
greenhouse, and a 6 mil polyethylene inner cover (can
be reused from old greenhouse film) covering the
entire half width of the interior of the big greenhouse.
Thermal performance is the ability of the
greenhouse and inner covers to accept as much
energy (light and heat) as possible, and retain it
overnight and into subsequent days. Economic
analysis shows that this inner cover is very cost
effective.
Further investigation using the 7.8 mil infrared
reradiating (IR) Coeva cover (a greenhouse film made
in Italy) in a two-layer cover on the big greenhouse
may prove to be thermally better than the two-layer, 6
mil, standard polyethylene covering. Our continuing
research may also show this combination to be more
economical if a useful life expectancy of eight years
can be obtained (useful meaning it still transmits a
high percentage of light towards the end).
Materials
Comparison
*Average Cost /
Thermal
sq. ft.
Performance (US$)
Tunnel Inner Cover (5 foot bed)
Cravo Equipment XLS10
blanket thermal
Poly, 6 mil, used
Poly, 6 mil, new
Agribon-70 (2 oz. per yard
spun polyester)
Aluminet (Green-tex)
Tufbell (PVA, poly vinyl alcohol)
0.76F
$0.18
0.00F
0.00F
-0.76F
0.00
0.10
0.05
-1.49F
-2.07F
0.33
0.23
0.10
0.00
0.05
Greenhouse Cover
Two layers 6 mil IR AC poly w/ 6
mil IR AC poly inner cover (new)
Two layers 6 mil IR AC poly w/ 6
mil IR AC poly inner cover (used)
Single layer 7.8 mil IR AC Coeva
(poly) Growers Requisite Ltd.,
w/ Agibon-70 1/2 width of inner
cover
2.89F
0.24
2.89F
0.19
-2.16F
0.15
Lateral beds. Note the cover (pulled back during the daytime)
against the side of the greenhouse.
32
efficient greenhouse
Structure Design. The Gothic arch
shape minimizes interior shading,
reduces snow load, and raises the
height of the structure for better
summer ventilation. The size and
relationship of length to width affects
lighting (or shading), energy gain,
growing space, ventilation, cost per
square foot, and much more.
For example, a 10 by 90 foot (3 x
27 m) tunnel has a 200 foot (61 m)
lineal perimeter and a 900 square foot
(84 m2) growing area. A 30 by 70 foot
(9 x 21 m) greenhouse has a 200 foot
(61 m) lineal perimeter and a 2,100
square foot (195 m2) growing area.
Not only is this important for
greenhouse growing area, but it is
critical for the ratio of perimeter, or
heat loss potential, to growing area
(greater than 2:1 ratio in this
The Moores winter greenhouse yields a healthy harvest.
example).
Combining all the above criteria
(price per square foot, etc.), a 28 or 30
In either case, the covering can be as economical as old
foot wide by 96 foot long (8.5 or 9 x 29 m) greenhouse
greenhouse film or as sophisticated (and expensive) as
seems to be the best bet for success. Using this size and
thermal curtains. The combination of the tunnels inside the
shape with the interior grow tunnels, we have achieved
greenhouse and the greenhouse covering itself results in a
our design objectives.
20 to 22F (1112C) increase over average minimum
Interior Design. Two interior designs can be used. One
outside ambient temperature.
design uses longitudinal, 5 foot (1.5 m) wide beds with 8
On sunny days, the covering on the interior tunnels can
foot (2.4 m) curved polyethylene water pipes (this can be
be pulled or rolled back. If the south half is rolled or
used pipe, 3/4 to 11/4 inch; 1932 mm) spaced 3 to 5 feet
flipped up to expose the bed, the incoming, short-wave
(0.91.5 m) apart and set on 12 to 18 inch (3046 cm) pins
solar radiation is absorbed and reradiated as long wave
driven three quarters of the way into the edge of the 5 foot
radiation from plants and soil. The inner covers can then
wide beds.
reflect this long-wave radiation. If using the longitudinal
Another interior design uses a center path and lateral, 5
beds, both sides are rolled or flipped up for harvesting,
foot beds and 1 foot (0.3 m) paths covered from the side of
watering, or venting. When spring comes, these tunnels
the greenhouse to the center path. The cover is supported by
1/2 inch EMT conduit with a PVC center support.
can be pulled up off the ground pins and removed for use
on outside beds.
Ventilation. Ventilation is achieved using traditional
aluminum louvers or a homemade butterfly louver that can
One 32 watt UniSolar PV provides power
open the upper section of the gable end. In either case, two,
to the datalogging unit and inflation blower.
4 by 8 foot (1.2 x 2.4 m) doors at each end complete the
natural ventilation system.
There is no denying that these greenhouses get hot
(105110F; 4143C) in the summer, yet we have always
attained good yields. Interestingly, the leaf surface is cooler,
even though ambient temperature is much higher than
outside temperatures. (Hot leaf surfaces cause blossom drop
and a shutdown of photosynthesis.) The plants grown in the
summertomatoes, peppers, eggplant, cucumbers, and
squashare tropical in nature and do quite well.
Roof Coverings. Traditional greenhouses of this type
use an inflation fan to keep the air pressurized between the
two layers of plastic. This provides a thermal dead air space
and improves the longevity of the plastic by keeping it from
flapping in the wind.
www.homepower.com
33
efficient greenhouse
Greenhouse Costs
30 x 96 Feet
Item
Frame
Polygal, splices, & fasteners
(end wall)
IR poly, 48 x 100 feet
Shipping
UniSolar 32 W PV module
2 Shutters, 45 x 45 inches
Poly, 48 x 100 feet (or 2)
Wire lock (base & wires)
12 Cross ties & frames
Framing & baseboard, sawmill
Roll-ups
2 Golf cart batteries, 6 V
Morningstar PS30 charge
controller
Gable rafter trim (wire lock)
Inflation fan & adapter to poly
Sand & cement
Framing from lumber yard
Misc. hardware
Poly patch
2 Jumper kits
Alternative gable end poly,
staples, etc.
Total
Deluxe
Version*
$2,625.00
1,298.60
459.86
411.72
365.00
355.74
323.49
312.85
300.00
200.00
174.00
160.00
150.00
78.40
77.27
75.00
50.00
50.00
21.90
17.40
$7,506.23
Scaled
Down**
$2,625.00
411.72
365.00
646.98
300.00
200.00
160.00
150.00
77.27
75.00
200.00
50.00
21.90
17.40
100.00
$5,400.27
34
Access
Steve & Carol Moore, Harmony Essentials, 1522 Lefever
Ln., Spring Grove, PA 17362 717-225-2489
sandcmoore@juno.com Two-day solar greenhouse
workshops will be held March 56, 2004 and September
2425, 2004. Contact Steve & Carol for details.
Grow Biointensive, Ecology Action, 5798 Ridgewood Rd.,
Willits CA 95490 707-459-0150 Fax: 707-459-5409
bountiful@sonic.net www.growbiointensive.org
Growers Requisites Limited, 1915 Setterington Dr.,
Kingsville, ON Canada N9Y 2E5 800-819-8776 or
519-326-4466 Fax: 519-326-3492 growers@mnsi.net
www.greenhousepoly.ca Coeva greenhouse cover material
Four Season Harvest, by Eliot Coleman, Paperback, 236
pages, ISBN 1-890132-27-6 US$24.95 from Chelsea Green
Publishing Company, PO Box 428, White River Junction,
VT 05001 800-639-4099 or 802-295-6300 Fax:
802-295-6444 info@chelseagreen.com
www.chelseagreen.com
efficient greenhouse
How to Grow More Vegetables, by John Jeavons, 6th edition,
paperback, 240 pages, ISBN 1-58008-233-5, US$17.95 from
Bountiful Gardens, 18001 Shafer Ranch Rd., Willits CA
95490-9626 707-459-6410 www.bountifulgardens.org.
Winter Harvest ManualFarming the Backside of the Calendar,
by Eliot Coleman, 1998, 57 pages. US$15 postpaid from
Four Season Farm, 609 Weir Cove Rd., Harborside, ME
04642 www.fourseasonfarm.com
Looking for
Variety?
Fast
& Accurate
Rt 1 Box 260-1,
Linden, TN 37096
317 501-2529
info@solarpathfinder.com Fax 931-589-5400
www.solarpathfinder.com
Get SunWize!
SunWize offers one-stop shopping with the industrys
largest inventory and variety of modules, racks, batteries,
controllers, inverters and other system components and
at great prices, too! Were the people that make it happen
for your business. Be successful, choose SunWize!
How it works:
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www.homepower.com
35
Polar Power
At more than 66 N latitude, Camp Raven receives all its electricity from the almost nonstop sun and wind.
The main Weather-Port tent, communications center, and renewable energy system are shown above.
38
Camp Raven
The U.S. National Science Foundations (NSF) Office of
Polar Programs funds scientific research in the Arctic and
Antarctica. One of the camps funded by the NSF in the
Arctic is Camp Raven. Raven is located on the Greenland ice
cap, just below the Arctic Circle (66 29.786 N, 46 17.095
W). The camps main function is to serve as a training
facility for the New York Air National Guard (NYANG), the
primary logistical aircraft support provider for the United
States Polar Programs. A limited amount of scientific
support is also provided at this facility, with two, yearround, autonomous instrument stations.
The camp itself operates only during the boreal (far
northern) summer, typically late April through mid-August.
The Raven support staff consists of two people, typically a
couple. My wife Amy and I have run this camp twice, first
in 2001, and again in 2003. I helped develop a small but
serviceable renewable energy system at the camp. Several
people have contributed to the evolution of this system. Im
just the guy telling you about it.
Project manager Mark Sparky Begnaud put a lot of
work into this system, both in the design and
polar power
implementation. Joe Solar Joe Yarkin helped to install the
system twice, and made significant contributions along the
way. My wife and I alternate seasons with another couple,
Mark and Louise Albershardt, who have also made several
suggestions for improvement.
The Environment
Most people would find the environment on the
Greenland ice cap rather inhospitable. As you might expect,
it is fairly cold, with frequent storms that make working
conditions challenging, to say the least. Yet Camp Raven is
fairly unique among the polar ice cap facilities. Due to its
relatively low latitude, it can actually get quite warm here in
the summer. On a sunny day in mid-summer, temperatures
can soar into the mid-40s (68C). The sun is reflecting
everywhere, which makes it feel much warmer. It may not
sound like a scorcher by lower 48 standards, but I assure
you that this is T-shirt weather.
Of course, the wholesale snow melting caused by such
warm temperatures creates numerous operational
problems, and may be indicative of serious implications for
the entire planet. Indeed, at other Greenland ice camps, such
as Summit Camp, global climate change is a major focus of
scientific research. That however, is another story.
While Raven may be located in the banana belt of the
polar ice cap camps, it is still no picnic. Typical temperatures
at camp put-in can be as low as -40F (-40C). All outside
work (and its all outside until the structures are erected)
must be performed in heavy, specialized, extreme cold
weather gear. Everything must be done with gloves on, or
very, very quickly with gloves off. It is an acquired skill that
requires speed, dexterity, and a certain insensitivity to cold.
The weak ones are quickly weeded out.
39
polar power
All that Ive written so far paints a pretty bleak picture of
the environment. But there is also a very special beauty to
the ice cap. The light can create color hues and visual effects
seen nowhere else on this planet. Indeed, at times it feels like
another world. In the calm that follows a storm, ice crystals
are still settling back through the lower atmosphere. Sun
dogs, perihelions, and glories can light the sky like a 360
degree rainbow.
RE System
The system employed at Camp Raven is straightforward
and uses good quality components. As such, the operation is
fairly simple and requires very little maintenance. Since this
camp is erected and disassembled every season, efforts have
been made to make the electricity generating system quickly
deployable.
Wind Generator
work we need to do. Think about that the next time the daily
commute starts to get to you. Is it any wonder we love our
RE system, which has been on line, doing its job the whole
time, with no fuss, no muss? If we could just figure out a
way to power the track dozer with RE
The ice cap can be a hostile and often unforgiving
environment. Nothing grows there. There are no permanent
animal inhabitants. The birds that get blown inland from the
coast rarely have the reserves to make it back. But what this
area does have is abundant sun, wind, and water (albeit tied
up as snow and ice).
The summer average wind speed is approximately 15
knots, or 16.5 mph (7.4 m/s). Windstorms can frequently
exceed 50 knots, or 55 mph (24.5 m/s). Any time wind
speeds rise above 25 knots, visibility drops rapidly, and
outside work becomes nearly impossible. The winter
average wind speed is very high. Several science groups
have attempted to use small wind turbines from various
manufacturers for their unmanned sites. To my knowledge,
none have yet survived a single winter. The search
continues for a small wind turbine tough enough to make it
here year-round.
40
polar power
At the base of the tower, the input from the wind turbine
goes to the middle set of contacts in the transfer switch.
These contacts are continuously energized when the turbine
is spinning. The bottom set of contacts shorts the windings
together, while the top set connects to the breaker/
disconnect. The purpose of the breaker/disconnect is to
provide a simple method of disconnecting the wind
generator from the rest of the system, as well as providing
overcurrent protection.
Tech Specs
System Overview
System type: Off-grid PV/wind hybrid
Location: Camp Raven, Greenland
Solar resource: 20 average annual peak sun
hours, mid-April through mid-August
Production: 465 AC KWH per month average
Tower
Wind Turbine
PV System
The wind-electric system is augmented by a small
photovoltaic (PV or solar-electric) system, which allows for
battery charging on the relatively rare days when there is
little or no wind. The location of the camp at a fairly high
latitude on the ice cap creates some interesting factors for
mounting a PV array. The sun changes its angle (elevation)
in the sky quite rapidly over the course of the summer
season. Also, by mid-May, useable solar energy is available
for 340 degrees. The sun is only just dipping below the
horizon before rising again. At summer solstice, there is 24hour-a-day sun.
Photovoltaics
Modules: 3 Solarex SX120U, 120 W STC, 24 VDC
nominal
Array: 360 W STC, 24 VDC nominal
Array combiner box: Xantrex TCB6 with 10 A
fuses
Array disconnect: Xantrex DC250 enclosure with
two 60 A breakers
Array installation: custom ground mount, east,
south and west facing, 90 degree tilt angle
Balance of System
Inverter: Xantrex DR2424, 24 VDC nominal input,
120 VAC nominal output
PV charge controller: Xantrex C40, PWM
Wind charge controller for diversion load
regulation: Xantrex C60, PWM
System performance metering: Xantrex TM500,
AH meter
Engine generator: Honda EM3500, 3.5 KW,
120/240 VAC nominal, average annual run time
approximately 100 hours
Energy Storage
Batteries: Twelve, Deka Dominator gel-cell,
12 VDC nominal, 100 AH at the 20-hour rate
Battery pack: 24 VDC nominal, 600 AH total
Battery/inverter disconnect: Xantrex DC250, 250
A breaker
www.homepower.com
41
polar power
Photovoltaics:
Three Solarex SX120U,
120 W each, wired for
360 W total at 24 VDC
PV Combiner Box:
Trace TCB6,
three 10 A fuses
BERGY
1500
Generator:
Honda EM3500,
gasoline powered,
3.5 KW
at 120/240 VAC
Diversion
Controller:
Xantrex C60,
60 A, PWM
Wind Generator:
Bergey 1500, 1.5 KW
at 28 mph (12.5 m/sec),
3-phase wild AC
G N H
Wind Controller:
Bergey VCS 1.5,
3-phase wild AC input,
1.5 KW at 24 VDC output,
trace
DR 2424
G
N
H
VCS 1.5
27.5
Amp-Hour Meter:
Xantrex TM500
60 A
2A
PV Controller:
Xantrex C40,
40 A, PWM
H3 H2 H1
Breaker:
60 A,
to 24 VDC
loads
Outlet:
Double-gang,
120 VAC
AC Panel:
Two 15 A breakers,
to 120 VAC loads
The RE power panel travels to the camp site almost completely assembled.
It takes only six connections to make it operational.
42
Wind
Generator
Brake
Switch:
Shorts 3
phases
250 A
80 A
Diversion Load:
Enermaxer
1,800 W
H1 H2 H3
Wind Breaker:
3-pole, 60 A
polar power
In installations I have done in Antarctica, conventional
arrays, angled perpendicular to the sun, tend to act like
large wings. I have actually had whole structures weighing
several tons move by several meters, due to the force of the
wind. It speaks to the quality of the array mount, but is a
rather disconcerting experience for the occupants of the
structure. Another lesson learned. If mounted on a
nonpermanent structure, we typically either lay PV arrays
out flat or perpendicular to the surface.
Polar Code
I realize that the more code conscious readers
are probably thinking, You cant do that! Of
course you cant, but we can! There are many
aspects of setting up a temporary RE system in
this type of environment that differ from
setting up a permanent system back stateside.
We used #4/0 (107 mm2) welding cable for the
DC battery interconnects and inverter cabling.
The use of welding cable is pretty standard in
polar environments. The cable is very tough,
and remains flexible in extreme cold. It
typically would not meet code back home, even
though in my opinion it is a much better
material to use than large gauge, UL-approved,
house-type wiring. Stiff plastic insulation just
explodes when you try to bend it at -40F!
The Bergey and PV array feed into the power
panel through SO type cord. The use of this
type of conductor is probably not code
compliant either, but it has been used fairly
extensively (and successfully) in the polar
regions for this type of installation. Again, its
tough and fairly flexible. Its rated UV resistant,
and can even handle direct burial in snow. I
dont imagine there is any UL rating for this
application anyway, so we just use what
works.
There is no real system grounding, because
there is no real ground. Terra firma is below
7,000 feet (2,100 m) of ice. That would be a
mighty long ground rod, and since it would be
solid, frozen bedrock, it still wouldnt ground
well. Since the electrical inspector doesnt get
out this way, we basically treat the system as if
it were in a boat or RV. All the normal ground
points are made in boxes and fixtures. The DC
load center provides the main chassis ground
for the DC side of the system. The AC breaker
box provides the bonding point for the ground
and neutral of the AC side.
There is no use of conduit anywhere, since this
system is set up and taken down annually. It
has to be fast, not pretty. Many things were
done to make this an expeditious setup, but
they would never fly back in the civilized
world. Readers, do not duplicate every aspect
of this system for your RE systemyour
electrical inspector will never pass it. Still, the
Camp Raven system is as safe and reliable as
we could reasonably make it. It works quite
well.
www.homepower.com
43
polar power
Camp Raven Max. Loads
DC
Watts
1,800.0
Engel fridge/freezer
Hrs.
/Day
Daily WH
10.00 18,000.0
31.2
12.00
374.4
340.0
1.00
340.0
22.0
8.00
176.0
5.0
24.00
120.0
Telex transmit
9.5
12.00
114.0
Telex receive
80.0
1.00
80.0
9.0
8.00
72.0
36.0
1.00
36.0
25.0
1.00
25.0
Total DC
19,337.4
AC
Electric heater**
1,500.0
2.00
3,000.0
72.0
12.00
864.0
50.0
12.00
600.0
1,480.0
0.10
148.0
18.0
6.00
108.0
5.0
12.00
60.0
Microwave
Boom box stereo
Iridium phone transmit
3 CF lights
15.0
4.00
60.0
240.0
0.25
60.0
3.0
12.00
36.0
28.0
1.00
28.0
24.0
1.00
24.0
DeWalt charger
2.0
12.00
24.0
Davis WX station
1.8
12.00
21.6
35.0
0.50
17.5
15.0
1.00
15.0
120.0
0.01
1.2
Total AC
5,067.3
Grand Total
24,404.7
Makita charger
2 Radio charger receive
Coffee grinder
* Used only when winds are high and temperatures are low.
** Rarely used; if winds are high, sun is out, temps are low.
44
polar power
Until next yearvery little other than the wind generator and
the PV mount stays at Camp Raven over the arctic winter.
Global Example
The Camp Raven RE system is clean, efficient, and very
reliable. It uses natural resources that are abundant here. In
short, this is appropriate technology in action. The National
Science Foundations Office of Polar Programs would like to
see renewable energy in more widespread use throughout its
operations. It is our hope that all polar field camps will be able
to go this route in the near future. It would be a worthwhile
investment, for as any researcher in global climate change will
tell you, as go the polar regions, so goes the world.
System Operation
While the electrical system at Camp Raven has the
ability to use a backup generator, we have not had to do so
for the last three years. The generator is sometimes used to
operate electric block heaters on equipment, or for power
tools away from the main camp. It has not been necessary to
use it for basic camp infrastructure functions.
The critical camp load is the communications
equipment. The equipment consists of one HF radio, two
VHF radios (air and ground bands), an Iridium satellite
telephone, and an Inmarsat Telex system. We also run a little
Engel fridge/freezer on DC. This unit draws an incredibly
small amount of energy. We could probably support a larger
unit, but there is simply not enough space. Besides, theres a
pretty big freezer just outside the door
There are also numerous handheld radios that must be
recharged. And two laptop computers are on fairly
continuously throughout the day. One laptop has an Internet
link through the Iridium phone, which allowed me to
communicate with Home Power editors. The data transfer
speed is, wellpardon the punglacial. The other laptop is
for the Telex.
Access
Tracy Dahl ts_dahl@yahoo.com www.nsf.gov/od/opp
See photos under Raven 2001 at
www.summitcamp.org/photoalbum
National Science Foundation Office of Polar Programs,
Arctic Sciences Section, 4201 Wilson Blvd. #755, Arlington,
VA 22230 703-292-8029 Fax: 703-292-9081
dfriscic@nsf.gov www.nsf.gov/od/opp/arctic/start.htm
sunelec.com
Liquidation Sale
Inverters, Solar Panels, Wind Generators
305 536-9917
www.homepower.com
45
800-493-7877 or 760-597-1642
Fax 760-597-1731
2598 Fortune Way, Suite K
Vista, CA 92081 USA
Thermoelectric
Generators
A thermoelectric generator connected to the geothermal hot water supply of a summerhouse in SW Iceland provides continuous power
of 5 to 15 watts, depending on the temperature of the outside air. The most energy is supplied on the coldest days.
48
thermoelectric power
Thermoelectric Generator Applications
Generator
Hot In
Valve
Cold In
Generator
Valve
Valve
Valve
Pump
Radiator
Boiler/
Stove
Radiator
Hot Water
Through
Loop
Hot condensate from a geothermal well head is siphoned through this generator
to supply electricity for instrumentation.
www.homepower.com
49
thermoelectric power
Self-Powered Heating
The climate in Iceland, perhaps surprisingly, is cool but
not cold. Houses must be heated year-round, and for that,
the geothermal water offers unique luxury. In many places,
there are hot water wells, and in the countryside, cottages
tend to cluster in places where hot water is available. The
preferred way of heating is to route hot water through wallmounted radiators. However, such rural hot water supplies
are not the most reliable, so it is usually necessary to use a
closed loop with antifreeze. This loop is heated with water
from the geothermal supply using a heat exchanger.
But here is the snag. Circulation requires pumping, and
pumping requires electricity. In a cottage off the grid, the
electrical pump could be powered by photovoltaics or wind,
but in fact, a thermoelectric generator is the ideal source of
electricity.
The scheme is simple. An air-cooled generator is put on
the geothermal hot water supply line. This pipe is always
kept hot by allowing some hot water to flow to prevent
freezing. Hence, the generator charges the battery
constantly.
The real beauty is that the greatest power is produced
when there is the most cooling, namely in wintertime. That
is also when the cottage owner needs the most heating, and
the extra electricity for lighting and other things is most
Power Output
The output from a thermoelectric generator is
highly dependent on the temperature difference
or Delta T (T) between the hot side and the cold
side. First of all, the conversion efficiency is
largely proportional to T. This efficiency is
around 3 percent at 80C (144F) difference,
which means that 3 percent of the heat flow
from the hot side to the cold side becomes
electrical energy. At T = 40C (72F), this is
therefore 1.5 percent and so on.
The heat flow, of which this fraction becomes
electrical energy, is also proportional to T. By
multiplying the two, the output from a
thermoelectric cell is proportional to T
squared. So it is very important to receive the
heat at as high a temperature as possible, and
dump it at as low a temperature as possible. For
the cooling, cold water is much more effective
than air, but adds the extra cost of maintaining a
cold flow.
50
thermoelectric power
The Seebeck & Peltier Effects
The Seebeck effect occurs when junctions of two
dissimilar materials are formed, and a temperature
gradient is established within the loop. This is
shown in the diagram below. If the two junctions are
maintained at a different temperature (Th > Tc), then
there is a voltage (V) created between points 1 and 2
according to the equation: V = (Th-Tc).
If the loop is connected to an external electrical
resistance, then electrons flow in the loop and the
device functions as a generator, converting
thermal energy to electrical energy. is called the
Seebeck coefficient of the junction, which is
dependent upon the two materials in the loop. In
order to have as large as possible, specialized
Seebeck Effect
Peltier Effect
Qh
Th
Tc
1
Qc
Th
Tc
1
Heat drawn from a volcano is used with cold air from a glacier
to provide electricity for instrumentation and telemetry for scientists.
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51
thermoelectric power
Electrical Interfacing
Thermoelectric cells exhibit a linear characteristic between the open circuit voltage and the short circuit current.
In contrast, photovoltaic arrays have a characteristic with a knee at which the maximum power point is
located. The linear characteristic of the thermoelectric cell results in maximum power output when the voltage
under load is half the open circuit voltage, and consequently, the current is half the short circuit current. This is
achieved when the external and internal resistances are the same.
The easiest electrical interfacing is achieved by wiring the cells to induce 24 volts in open circuit at the nominal
hot/cold temperatures. When connected to a charge controller, the current drawn is that which drops the voltage
to about 12 volts. This places the operating point at the maximum power point.
Another RE Tool?
When considering thermoelectric generators:
Scientific Applications
The ultimate in these kinds of applications is to be
found in the middle of Icelands largest glacier, on a very
active volcano. There, scientists have used a
thermoelectric generator for about twenty years to
generate electricity for instruments and telemetry. Heat is
52
thermoelectric power
variety of different system configurations are possible, since
thermoelectric generators can be built into other systems,
like any other plumbing component.
As seen in HP 90, pg 50
Dealer Inquiries
Welcome
Access
Bjarni Thor Hafsteinsson, Chief Engineer, Varmaraf ehf,
Keldnaholti 112, Reykjavik, Iceland +354 553 4007 Fax:
+354 553 4062 bjarni@varmaraf.is www.varmaraf.is
See The Need for Winter Energy Supplement, Steve
Willey, HP36, page 47.
FuelCellStore.com, PO Box 4038, Boulder, CO 80306
866-327-3835 or 303 237 3834 Fax: 303 237 7810
info@fuelcellstore.com www.fuelcellstore.com
Varmaraf thermoelectric generators
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54
Malcolm Terence
2004 Malcolm Terence
Nestled in the tall redwood trees of a steep coastal rainforestthe perfect place to find a wizard of microhydro-electricity.
Hydro Breeder
Harris was standing in one of the few flat spots outside
his home when we arrived. Up theres where most of the
work gets done, he said with a nod, and down there is the
power plant for all our electricity. This is really a breeder
facilityusing hydro to build hydro.
56
hydro wizard
Harriss turbine looks like a streamlined bread machine
at the end of a 2 inch PVC pipeline that snakes down out of
the forest. An alternator like one in a car was bolted snugly
onto its top. Hidden underneath was a small bronze
waterwheel with a fringe of double cups, each the size of a
tablespoon. It sat near the edge of a tiny stream channel and
looked much like mine, but without the covering box Id
built to protect mine from the elements. I leave it out in the
weather and abuse it to see how it does, Harris said with a
grin. So far, so good.
57
hydro wizard
Positive Anarchy
Harris interrupted his explanation to examine the next
broken part in my bag, a tube that held the nozzle. A gaping
hole was worn in its side from the vibration. He shook his
58
Don Harris
Hydro System
Dons penstock (water delivery pipe) is 1,300 feet
(400 m) long, with 3 inch PVC reducing to a pair of
2 inch lines. The head (vertical drop) is 161 feet (49
m), and he uses a 5/16 inch (8 mm) nozzle
delivering 21 to 22 gpm at peak flow. Don is using
a single-nozzle for his permanent magnet
alternator, the first one of the current series, which
he built and installed two years ago. At peak flow,
the hydro plant produces 430 watts of 24 volt
electricity. In the dry season, he has seen his
output fall to 80 watts.
He uses a 200 foot (61 m) run of #4 (21 mm2)
copper wire to carry the output to a series of 20,
single-cell, nickel-iron batteries. Each is 1.2 volts
and 270 amp-hours. He says they are inefficient
and guzzle replacement water, but last forever and
are environmentally benign. Besides, he says,
they are easier to pack than an L-16 battery.
For the workshop machinery, a six-year-old Trace
SW4024 inverter gives Don AC. Battery voltage is
controlled with a 20-year-old Enermaxer
regulator. His house nearby still uses 12 volt DC
electricity, although he also uses a DR series Trace
2512 to provide some AC. On the roof of his
workshop, he has installed a 900 watt
photovoltaic array, but he hasnt needed them
enough yet to hook them up to his batteries.
hydro wizard
invention that begins in Nepal and ends in the Utah desert,
so Harris has dedicated months to constructing the next
generation of permanent magnet turbines, machines that
can be adjusted without being shut off. He pulled a
prototype out of another box of anarchy in the corner and
started explaining to me about magnetic lines of flux, a topic
that made me long for the simplicity of double elliptical
catches.
Although his father was a physicist working in optics,
Harris says he is mostly self-taught, with a few harmless
forays into Southern California colleges 40 years ago. Most
of what I know about mechanics and fabrication I learned
from building drag racers, he said as he buffed the hose
fitting, removed it from the lathe, and threaded in a 1/2 inch
(13 mm) nozzle. He handed it to me with a length of special
hose and a replacement field adjustment rheostat.
Finally we had all the histories, repaired parts, and
visions that we could manage, and we bid Don a goodbye
with an invitation to visit our canyon further north in
California someday. I remembered in the end that Dorothys
companions also got all they needed when they visited the
Wizard of Oz. I felt like a modern day scarecrow. Lets see,
I needed a brain, a 1/2 inch nozzle, and a new rheostat. Now
Im set.
Access
Malcolm Terence 831-420-1373
mterence@sccs.santacruz.k12.ca.us
Bliss Kok, Harris co-worker, carefully assembles the wax plug of
a turbine wheel. The wax is cast in plaster, then melted out,
after which the plaster mold is filled with bronze. A new wax
pattern is used for each wheel.
Vision
Harris said the switch to PM alternators delivered higher
wattage output with the same flow and pressure input. On
the other hand, it has more awkward controls than the
Delco-type system used on my machine, which adjusts with
the twist of a knob. The PMs require stopping the turbine for
each increment of adjustment. While he put the finishing
touches on the hose fitting, Harris announced that he was
working on a better PM system, one that came to him in a
vision.
Speaking over the hum of the lathe, Harris told a long
story that began, Once I gave five rupees to a beggar in
Nepal and ended several minutes later with on the
way back across Utah, I saw the Tibetan priest again
sprinkling out the dust. Its hard not to trust a vision for an
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59
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Solar Energy
International
Upcoming Workshops:
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P.O. Box 715, Carbondale, Colorado, USA 81623
From the
Ground Up
This straw bale building creates a warm, quiet, nurturing environment for kindergarten students
at the Waldorf School in Colorados Roaring Fork Valley.
62
natural building
For structural foundations that are also retaining walls,
using earth may not be feasible. However, many options are
available to reduce the use of, or avoid using concrete
altogether.
Foundations can be built with stone, over which
concrete can be poured or bags of earth can be set. Generally,
stone foundations are used for small houses or sheds. Drystacked stone is a time-tested method. Stone is strong,
usually locally available, and resistant to weathering.
Concrete
Wall
(Wood, Straw, or Other)
Concrete with Rebar
or Fiberglass
Rigid Board
Insulation
Rigid Board
Insulation
Perforated
Drain Line
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63
natural building
Embodied Energy in
Building Materials
Material
Straw bale
67
Adobe block
117
Rammed earth
117
Local stone
219
Concrete
361
Plasterboard
A Natural Enclosure
While the foundation of a building is like a good pair of
boots, crucial to the homes health, wall systems are the
flesh and bones of the building, and make up the bulk of the
material in a house. More and more people are turning to
the natural materials of earth and straw to build their walls.
1,694
Portland cement*
2,167
Plywood
2,889
Fiberglass insulation
8,416
Straw Bale
Straw has been used as a building material for centuries.
In Europe, you can find houses built out of straw and reeds
that are over 200 years old. In the United States, the idea of
building straw houses started in the late 1800s in the
Nebraska Sandhills area in response to a shortage of
lumber. These Nebraska-style structures used bales like
bricks, and have the roof load bearing directly on their straw
bale walls.
Straw is generally a waste productits whats left after
grain is harvested. Its also a renewable resource that is
grown annually. The U.S. Department of Agriculture says
that straw from the harvest of major grains in the U.S. could
be used to construct four million, 2,000 square foot (186 m3)
homes each year.
64
Watt-Hr. / Kg
natural building
Left: Putting up
an adobe wall.
Right: Making
adobe blocks in a
wooden frame.
Left: Rammed
earth construction
typically requires
industrial forms.
Right: A 24 inch
thick rammed
earth garden wall
ready for stucco.
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65
natural building
Building Codes
David Eisenberg
Stucco can be
lime, gypsum, or
natural earth.
66
natural building
or course, solidify overnight. Depressions need to be jabbed
into the top of the damp course, and then the next course
will have something to key into. With cob, the wall is
typically wide at the base and becomes narrower with each
course.
Bamboo
As Darrel DeBoer describes in The Art of Natural Building,
bamboo is an extremely strong fiber, having twice the
compressive strength of concrete and roughly the same
strength-to-weight ratio of steel in tension. Among its
numerous benefits, bamboo is:
Renewable: it will grow 10 to 12 inches (2530 cm) a day
once a grove is established. The living stalks can be
harvested within three to four years.
Versatile: It may be manufactured into boards to be used
in floors, walls, and roofs.
Available worldwide.
In traditional Japanese farmhouses, bamboo was used
for structural components, roof trusses, and rafters. In the
U.S., bamboo has mainly been used as flooring or as an
alternative to rebar in straw bale and earthen walls.
Used as trim, bamboo can add exotic beauty to a home.
Making cob
loaves that
can be thrown to
a person on a
ladder.
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Photo courtesy of David Eisenberg of the Development Center for Appropriate Technology (DCAT).
67
natural building
Wall R-Values
Natural Plasters
Cedar Rose Guelberth & Dan Chiras
2004 Cedar Rose Guelberth & Dan Chiras
Protective
Durable
Recyclable
Easily repairable
Easy to clean up after
Safe to work with
Fun to work with
Inexpensive
Breathable
Easy to sculpt and carve
Environmentally beneficial
R-Value
42.770.3
15.4
11.9
10.2
3.5
Recycled Materials
It is important to remember that some materials that
may not be considered natural are also used to build
sustainable, energy efficient, and quality buildings. Using
recycled or second-hand materials will cut costs, reduce
waste, and greatly lower the amount of embodied energy in
a building.
Not only are you reducing the amount of energy it takes
to manufacture a new product, you are negating the amount
of energy it would have taken in disposal of the reused
material. Used tires and aluminum cans (used in
Earthships) are only some of the recycled products that can
be used to build energy efficient sustainable homes.
Natural Solutions
The most important thing to remember is that you dont
have to pick only one of these building materials. Hybrid
solutions, such as a straw bale home with cob to round out
the corners, or an adobe home, with a straw bale northern
wall for insulation, might work best for your location and
climate. Whichever natural building materials you choose,
youre sure to have a comfortable, beautiful, energy efficient
home just waiting for a renewable energy system to power it.
68
Construction
Straw bale
Access
Laurie Stone & Rachel Ware, Solar Energy International,
PO Box 715, Carbondale, CO 81623 970-963-8855 Fax:
970-963-8866 sei@solarenergy.org www.solarenergy.org
natural building
Development Center for Appropriate Technology (DCAT),
PO Box 27513, Tucson, AZ 85713 520-624-6628 Fax:
520-798-3701 strawnet@aol.com www.dcat.net
The Art of Natural Building, edited by Joseph F. Kennedy,
Michael G. Smith, & Catherine Wanek, 2002, Paperback,
304 pages, ISBN 0865714339, US$26.95 from New Society
Publishers, PO Box 189, Gabriola Island, BC, Canada, V0R
1X0 250-247-9737 Fax: 250-247-7471
info@newsociety.com www.newsociety.com
The Hand-Sculpted House, Ianto Evans, Michael G. Smith, &
Linda Smiley, 2002, Paperback, 384 pages, ISBN 1-89013234-9, US$35 from Chelsea Green Publishing, PO Box 428,
White River Junction, VT 05001 800-639-4099 or
802-295-6300 Fax: 802-295-6444 info@chelseagreen.com
www.chelseagreen.com
The Natural Plaster Book, Cedar Rose Guelberth & Dan
Chiras, New Society Publishers, 2003, Paperback, 304
pages, ISBN 0865714495, US$29.95 from New Society
Publishers, PO Box 189, Gabriola Island, BC, Canada, V0R
1X0 250-247-9737 Fax: 250-247-7471
info@newsociety.com www.newsociety.com
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69
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Responsible
Wood Heating
A Kind-to-the-Environment Guide
John Gulland
2004 John Gulland
72
wood heat
Wood energy is the black sheep of
the renewable energy family. Of all
the renewable options, it causes
environmentalists the most discomfort. Mostly they worry that burning
wood means making a lot of smoke
pollution and cutting down precious
trees for fuel. Besides, woodstoves
are not as technologically sexy as
glittering solar panels and whirling
wind turbines. As one anti-wood
burning activist said at a public
meeting, We need to look to new
sources of energy, not old ones.
But wood can be a renewable fuel, and as all renewable
energy aficionados know, there arent too many options
available, especially ones good at providing bulk heat. In
practical terms, households hoping to run on renewable
energy in moderate and cold climate regions will likely rely
on wood fuel to some extent.
73
wood heat
In Medford, Oregon, an inversion layer frequently traps auto, industry, and wood
burning emissions, creating air quality problems. This can be mitigated somewhat by
practicing environmentally responsible wood burning.
74
wood heat
kitchen, living, and dining rooms. This arrangement makes
the space where you eat, relax, and entertain the warmest in
the house, while utility areas and bedrooms stay cooler. A
moderately sized, energy efficient house can be heated
comfortably with a single, well-located woodstove.
A chimney is an important part of heater operationit is
not simply an exhaust pipe. Think of it as the engine that
drives the wood heating system. Straight chimney systems
provide the most reliable, maintenance-free performance. So
locate the chimney directly above the stove location so the
flue pipe and chimney run straight up from the stove flue
collar. This arrangement produces a quickly building, strong
draft, with no back drafts and much less chance of smoke
rollout when the door is opened for loading. Plus,
maintenance is reducedin thirteen years of use, my
chimney has never had a brush through it, although I check
for creosote build-up often. Straight-up chimney systems
give the kind of performance we all want.
Getting the right heater is important, and fortunately, the
general criteria are fairly simple. Look for anything that is
certified for low emissions by the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA). A good selection of EPA certified
woodstoves, fireplace inserts, and factory-built fireplaces is
available. Not only will an EPA certified heater emit about
ninety percent less smoke, it will deliver up to one-third
higher efficiency than the old parlor or airtight stove. Youll
get more heat from less wood and make less pollution in the
bargain.
If you are a fan of masonry construction, you could
consider a masonry heater, which cannot be EPA certified
because of their design features, but which have been shown
to burn clean and provide efficient heating. A masonry
heater is a specialized design in which a fire is burned
rapidly and the heat is absorbed by tons of masonry mass
for gentle release over the next 12 to 24 hours.
Youll need help selecting the right heater. For stoves,
inserts, and fireplaces, visit as many specialty hearth
retailers as you can, and hear what the sales people have to
say. If you are able to visit at least three, their relative
competence will probably be revealed. I suggest you pick
the dealer you trust first, before making the final product
decision. A good dealer can offer you workable options.
Then it is up to you to select what you think works best for
you. Because the stove, insert, or fireplace will become an
ever-present member of the family, youd better like the look
of it.
Minor differences in smoke emission ratings or in
published efficiency figures dont really mean much,
considering that your fuel and operating practices will have
such a large effect on performance. Find a good dealer, listen
to his or her advice, and pick what you like, as long as it is
EPA certified. Chances are good that youll be satisfied.
If a masonry heater is more to your liking and within
your budget, contact a member of the Masonry Heater
Association of North America. In my experience, heater
builders are talented, committed individuals who could
make a lot more money in some other line of work if they
didnt insist on doing what they love.
www.homepower.com
75
wood heat
The other major source of firewood
is logging operations that produce
lumber, pulp, or veneer logs. In these
operations, there is always waste
produced, such as trees that are rotten
in the center or are damaged by road
and trail building, and the tops and
branches for which there may be no
commercial market other than
firewood. While these logging
operations do not necessarily use
sustainable methods, many do, and
the damage would be done whether or
not some of the waste wood is diverted
as firewood.
The
key
to
understanding
sustainable forestry is to view the
forest not as a museum containing
A healthy forest yields tons of biomass each year, some of which can be beneficially
exhibits, but as a living community,
diverted for home heating. This forest in Oregons Cascade mountains has been
which like all communities, is
sustainably logged by the same ranching family for more than 100 years.
constantly evolving. Climate, soil
quality, and site characteristics vary
In practical terms, sustainable forest management can be
widely, but many of the forested areas of North America are
described as uneven age selective harvesting. It means
highly productive, meaning that a lot of firewood can be
removing damaged or diseased trees and thinning
removed each year from each acre, while the quality of the
concentrated stands of single species, while leaving seed
stand and wildlife habitat are enhanced.
trees of all present species and some standing dead trees to
Those of us who heat homes with wood can do our part
provide wildlife habitat. Woodlots in farm country generally
for sustainability by pressuring our firewood suppliers to
conform to this prescription. If you can get your firewood
prove that the wood they sell comes from a sustainable
from a farmer, there is a good chance that it comes from a
source. If many of their customers asked questions about
sustainable source.
sustainable forestry, firewood dealers would soon pressure
their suppliers, and the public will would be expressed
One mans slash.... Gathering firewood from a logging slash
within the firewood market.
pile, which usually gets burned anyway, will put that wood to
Firewood should be cut, split, and stacked in an open
use while helping to clean up an unsightly mess.
area in early spring to be ready to burn in the fall. Very hard
woods like oak may take longer, and drying in damp
climates can also take longer than just the summer months.
Here is one final suggestion about sustainable firewood.
Ugly woodpiles that include wood from less desirable
species tend to be more sustainable than perfect piles of
maple or oak with regular pieces in the classic wedge shape.
This is because straight lengths of these high-value, slow
growing species should be used for furniture, not wood
heating.
Ugly woodpiles are created by using everything, right
down to 2 inch (5 cm) diameter sticks, and including all
the bent and twisted sections of the tops. Although I live
in sugar maple country, my firewood is mostly white
birch and poplar because I have a lot of them on my
property, and because they mature in about 35 years and
then fall over. I just catch them for firewood before they
fall.
Regarding fuel other than firewood, dont burn it.
Burning waste paper, or even worse, general household
trash, produces elevated emissions of dioxin and other nasty
toxic gases. Burning saltwater driftwood has the same
result. Burn clean, dry, uncoated, untreated wood and just
enough newspaper to light the fires.
76
wood heat
Operating a Wood Heating System
What day-to-day practices produce less smoke and
higher efficiency? There is no simple formula for building
and maintaining fires that deliver maximum heating
efficiency and minimize smoke, except to say that wood
should be actively flaming until it is reduced to charcoal.
(See www.woodheat.org to learn about the top-down fire
starting technique and more wood burning tips for
maximum efficiency and minimal smoke.)
The design differences among woodstove models and
chimney configurations, and differences in firewood and
heat demand all have their effects on wood burning
practice. That is to say, we users must adapt to conditions
and learn by experience the best way to operate our wood
heat systems to achieve the twin goals of high efficiency and
low emissions. Given that limitation, however, here are
some general guidelines that might be useful.
EPA certified woodstoves differ greatly from those built
up until the late 1980s. These advanced stoves achieve
higher combustion efficiency and fewer emissions by
burning the smoke before it leaves the firebox. Catalytic
models have a ceramic honeycomb coated with a catalyst
inside the stove that lowers the ignition temperature of
combustible gases.
Noncatalytic stoves use firebox insulation, large baffles,
and super-heated combustion air distributed in the firebox
to burn the smoke effectively. The operating instructions
supplied with the heater should be followed, especially the
procedures for operating catalytic stoves, which usually
give precise instructions for ensuring that the catalyst lights
off properly.
Evaporation
The first stage of combustion is evaporation,
when energy is expended to remove moisture
from the wood. Using energy to drive off excess
water in firewood robs the stove of energy
needed for an efficient and clean burn. Also, much
of the energy wasted in evaporating water is
energy that could have heated your home.
Emissions
As heat inside the stove intensifies, waste gases
are released from the wood. Unburned gases in
smoke are emitted into the air as pollution or
condensed in the chimney, causing creosote
build-up. Waste gases from wood need oxygen in
order to burn. This is why starving a fire for air, or
banking down a fire is the worst way to burn.
Always give a fire a generous supply of
combustion air.
Charcoal
Beauty is in the eye of the beholdera sustainable woodpile
does not contain uniform pieces of only the best wood.
www.homepower.com
77
wood heat
Remove ashes frequently. Dont let them build up in the
firebox or ash pan. In the firebox, they interfere with proper
loading and make dealing with the coal bed more difficult.
In stoves with ash pans, the forgetful owner who doesnt
empty ashes frequently enough ends up with a dusty mess
to clean up as ashes end up everywhere under and inside
the stove body. In cold weather, I remove a small amount of
ash from my firebox every morning before loading.
Much more could be said about the finer points of
modern woodstove operation. But with these basic ideas
and a good attitude as a starting point, you can develop
your own special practices that suit your system, firewood,
and heat demand. And thats part of the pleasure of heating
with wood.
78
Access
John Gulland, Killaloe, Ontario, Canada Wood heat
consultant and executive director of the Wood Heat
Organization, Inc.
Wood Heat Organization, Inc. www.woodheat.org
HearthNet www.hearth.com
Hearth, Patio, and Barbecue Association, 1601 North Kent
Street, Suite 1001, Arlington, VA 22209 703-522-0086
Fax: 703-522-0548 hpbamail@hpba.org www.hpba.org
The Masonry Heater Association of North America,
Beverly J. Marois, Administrator, 1252 Stock Farm Rd.,
Randolph, Vermont 05060 802-728-5896 Fax: 802-7286004 bmarois@sovernet.com www.mha-net.org
Oregon Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ)
www.deq.state.or.us/aq/woodstoves/woodstoves101.htm
TM
79
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Dec/Jan 2004
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81
Sinergex
PureSine 600
Inverter
Joe Schwartz
2004 Joe Schwartz
Application:
82
Overvoltage
Power Quality
I occasionally check the power
quality of the utility grid and often see
total harmonic distortion values
between 2 and 3 percent. With that in
15.7
170.0
121.1
0.13
1.0%
28.0
12.71
2.2
56.3%
21.8
169.6
120.9
0.18
1.0%
34.3
12.70
2.7
63.5%
43.4
168.8
120.5
0.36
1.0%
57.0
12.67
4.5
76.1%
67.3
168.0
120.2
0.56
0.9%
80.9
12.64
6.4
83.2%
90.0
167.6
120.0
0.75
0.8%
103.4
12.61
8.2
87.0%
174.0
166.8
119.2
1.46
0.8%
194.2
12.53
15.5
89.6%
258.7
166.8
119.2
2.17
0.8%
294.6
12.43
23.7
87.8%
343.9
166.8
119.0
2.89
0.8%
396.7
12.32
32.2
86.7%
496.9
164.4
118.3
4.20
0.9%
594.9
12.14
49.0
83.5%
585.6
168.4
118.3
4.95
1.4%
718.8
12.02
59.8
81.5%
664.5
162.8
117.4
5.66
2.7%
848.7
11.92
71.2
78.3%
www.homepower.com
83
REview
Shortcomings
While the AC power quality of the PS600 inverter is
great, some of its design characteristics fall short of my
dream inverter. The battery input terminals on the inverter
are well isolated from each other, but they are not conduit
ready. This makes a code compliant installation difficult,
since youd have to add a custom junction box to the DC end
of the inverter.
The inverters DC terminal blocks use Allen-type,
compression set screws that require a small ring lug. The
inverter package included two of the appropriate sized lugs,
but wire size was limited to #6 (13 mm2) CU wire. This was fine
in my case, since the battery to inverter wire length was only 6
High Points:
PS600 Efficiency
100%
80%
Efficiency
feet (1.8 m). But longer and larger inverter/battery wiring will
require a combiner block or lugs to transition down to #6 wire
at the inverter. A lug is provided for the equipment ground
conductor and accepts up to #8 (8 mm2) wire.
In the features section of the inverters manual, high
surge in motor start capacity is listed. This is definitely
stretching things a bit. The maximum output rating for the
inverter is 680 watts for three minutes. The surge rating for
the inverter is only 800 watts. This inverter isnt a good
candidate for systems that will power small power tools or
motors that surge above 800 watts. However, many small
RE systems have loads similar to minecomputers,
lighting, and entertainment gear. The high power quality of
the PS600 makes it an appropriate choice for systems with
similar loads.
Low Points:
60%
40%
20%
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
AC Load (Watts)
84
REview
Inverter Swap
A few months ago, I transitioned into serious
construction mode, and needed a larger sine wave inverter
to run power tools, and power my computers and other
electronic gear. I swapped the two, 12 VDC inverters in my
cabin system for a single, 2,000 watt sine wave inverter that
will run my office gear and my circular saw. Ill be
reinstalling the Sinergex PS600 at HPs production office, so
I can run my laptop off-grid when I work downtown.
Access
Joe Schwartz, Home Power, PO Box 520, Ashland, OR 97520
541-944-0780 joe.schwartz@homepower.com
Butler Sun
Solutions
Solar-Assisted Hot Water Systems
For Do-It-Yourselfers
& Solar Professionals
www.butlersunsolutions.com
www.liquidsunhydro.com
360-853-7435 info@liquidsunhydro.com
PO Box 85, Rockport, WA 98283
Inquire about dealer pricing.
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85
29
each
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87
Matt McKivigan and Kris Kadera of Sun Friendly Concepts, Inc. with a simple solar hot air system that you can install.
88
The Roof
The most popular place to put solar hot air collectors is
on the roof. Less shade will affect them, and the roof allows
you to easily do a clean, efficient installation. Lets start on
the roof and work our way down.
hot air
Galvanized duct is used as weatherproofing outside the
outer covering of the insulated flex duct, and overlaps the
roof jack. Any adjustable elbows for the weatherproofing
need to be placed over the insulated flex before it is attached
to the collector. Straight pieces of duct snap together to
connect the elbows to the roof jack, and all of the joints
should be sealed with silicone sealant.
The snap disc sensor (a simple, thermostatic fan switch,
described in the previous article) also needs to be fastened
to the collector absorber plate via the duct port, before the
ducting is installed. This wire will not be hot (energized) yet,
so there will not be any danger of electrical shock until it is
connected to a live circuit. The temperature rating of the
wires into the collector should be above 300F (149C). You
can use toaster wire (at AAA Solar, we use 200C rated #14)
or other suitable high temperature insulated wire inside the
collector.
Kris cuts a 9 inch hole, for the 8 inch duct,
in exactly the right spot.
Matt attaches the snap disk in the hot air outlet before
connecting the duct. The wires will run between
the flexible duct and the rigid duct.
The Attic
The attic is a hot placeget in and out as quickly as
possible! A two or three person crew will normally
coordinate things and get the attic work completed in the
morning, avoiding the heat of the day.
The attic is where everything ties together. Work to be
accomplished here includes hanging the blower and
www.homepower.com
89
hot air
Tools
Required:
1/4
Measuring tape
Pliers
Screwdrivers
Drop cloth
Flashlight
Hammer
Nice to have:
Stud finder
Angle gauge
Compass
1/2
Circular saw
Torpedo level
90
hot air
thisthe HVAC industry also has a ready-made 31/4 by 10
inch (8.3 x 25 cm) duct that will serve in many instances. No
matter what, get the cold air from the floor level of the
rooms you wish to heat if you want the system to work.
The Ducting
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91
hot air
System Layout Example
Heat Register:
In living room,
on ceiling
Dining
Kitchen
Collector:
On roof
Blower &
Damper:
In heat
supply duct,
not shown
Bedroom
Bathroom
Cold Return Duct:
In attic, less than 50
feet long
Bedroom
Bedroom
Cold Grille:
In hall,
near floor
Note: Ideal systems have one hot air supply and one cold air return.
Multiple ducts can create unpredictable air flow reducing efficiency.
Inside Layout
The inside work for the ducting isnt much. Cut the
wallboard for the cold air grille and hot air register, mount
them plumb and level, and thats about it. A register is just
a fancy grille that has moveable vanes and can close all the
way if you wish. Most of the inside work has to do with
laying out the system and tying into an electrical circuit.
Electricity
The blowers used in a normal solar air collector system
are fractional horsepower AC motors. What this means as
far as the electrical code is concerned is that they can be cord
and plug connected, and the electricity to run the blower can
be taken off any branch circuit in the home. Usually a
convenient receptacle near the cold air return makes a good
choice. An electrical remodel box can be set in the wall space
above the receptacle and wires snaked up from the
receptacle to the remodel box and down from the attic. The
line voltage thermostat controlling the system will be
mounted on the remodel box.
Cautionif you choose to do the wiring yourself, make
sure the breaker to the receptacle is off. Also make sure the
92
hot air
System Wiring
Snap Disk:
Thermal switch,
at hot end of
collector
Note: Mark
both ends of
this wire black
to denote hot
Wire Nut
Wire Nut
Wire:
14-2 romex for a 15 A circuit;
12-2 romex for a 20 A circuit
Heating Thermostat:
Line voltage, (cooling
thermostat will not work)
Power Supply:
120 VAC
Wall-Mounted Collectors
Mounting an air collector on a wall is even simpler than
the roof mount. If the collectors have the cold air inlet and
hot air outlet on opposite ends of the collector, it can even be
mounted flush with the wall. The cold air will be on the
bottom and the hot air on the top.
As long as the duct is limited to through the wall, a small
propeller fan can be used to circulate the heated air through
the collector and into the building. Since the fan is in the
airflow path, it is best to mount it in the cold air return,
pushing air through the collector. This is different than roof
mounted units, but placing a fan motor in the hot air path
may damage the motor.
www.homepower.com
93
hot air
Hot Air System Costs
Item
Cost (US$)
$760
235
135
45
Access
30
25
20
Total
$1,250
Solar Comfort
Solar air collector systems are simple, relatively easy to
install, and have quick paybacks in climates requiring
building heat in the winter. How quick the payback is
depends on the fuel displaced. It can be as little as two or
three years if displacing high priced electricity and propane.
It can be as long as fifteen years if you have cheap natural
gas and limited sunshine.
Air collector systems are a good option for saving energy
and moneyif the building is already energy tight. Good
94
PS PS
M
PU PUM
E E
C
A IBL
F
R
S
U
S
ER
M ETAPUMP
B
and more . . .
SU
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95
Photovoltaic Module
AKA: PV module, solar-electric panel, solar-electric module
Used In: Solar-electric systems both on and off the utility grid
What It Is: A group of silicon cells or other materials that are specifically
manufactured to generate electricity when exposed to sunlight.
What It Aint: Electrical photography
In 1839, a French physicist named Edmond Becquerel discovered that
certain dissimilar materials, bonded together, would generate electricity
when exposed to sunlightthe photovoltaic (foto-vl-tay-ik) effect. More
than 100 years passed before U.S.-based Bell Laboratories developed a
silicon solar cell that produced enough energy for use in practical
applicationsmainly charging batteries used in remote communications
systems. Today, companies large and small, both public and private, are
manufacturers of PVs that go into grid-connected and stand-alone power
systems.
PV modules shouldnt be confused with solar thermal modules.
Thermal panels use the suns heat to warm water or air. PV modules use
light from the sun to generate electricity, and actually perform better
when the ambient temperature is colder.
96
R.E.S.T. EASY
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E f f o r t l e s s Designed for longterm operation and minimal maintenance
S t o r a g e Energy from a variety of sources available when you need it
T r o j a n The worlds manufacturer of deep cycle batteries
TM
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TROJAN MASTER DISTRIBUTORS WORLDWIDE
Phone: 800-423-6569 www.trojanbattery.com
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97
Head Trips
Hex head cap screw describes a
threaded fastener that has a six sided
(hex) cap or head on one end that
gives you a place to grip the fastener
with a wrench and thread it into a
threaded hole or nut.
Two other cap screw types are also
used on automobiles and machinery.
The first type is called a socket head cap
screw. This fastener has a round head
with a hex socket formed into the center
of the cap for the hex or Allen wrench
that is used to thread it into place. This
cap screw is used in places where there
isnt room for the head of a hex head cap
screw, or when the top of the fasteners
head cant project above the surface of
the part its installed in.
98
L to R: Grade 5 and Grade 8 hex head cap screws, a socket head cap screw,
and a flat head cap screw. Rear and far right: two types of Allen wrenches
for socket and flat head screws.
welder who builds the battery racks and motor mounts for
my kits thinks that all the fasteners on a chassis should be
fine threaded because they are stronger. However, the
fastener salesman I buy from thinks that the fine thread
form is obsolete and should not be used or even produced
at all. He feels that the 10 percent difference in strength is
not an issue.
I agree, and when given the choice, I use coarse threaded
fasteners. They are easier to use, and have less chance of
cross threading when you are starting the nut on the bolt or
installing a bolt into a tapped hole. They make assembly and
disassembly fasterfewer threads per inch means fewer
turns of the wrench.
Coarse threaded fasteners are readily available in more
sizes than fine threaded ones. If you are building a new
conversion, pick one form to use and stay with it. You might
have to switch thread types if a component has threaded
holes with a different form.
Ive defined all of the parts of the bolt except the number
11/2 inch, which is the length. Since you will be concerned
with whether the bolt is long enough or short enough for
your application, you should know how to measure the
length of a bolt. Both the hex head and socket head bolts are
measured from the bottom of the head to the end of the bolt.
In contrast, the flat head bolt is measured from the flat, top
surface of the head to the end of the bolt.
Bolts come in many different lengths, depending on head
style, diameter, and thread type, coarse or fine. If you are
starting a conversion from scratch, go to your local hardware
store and do your design based on whats available.
Another thing to consider when deciding what length of
bolt to use is the length of the body of the bolt. The body of
the bolt is the unthreaded part between the head and the
threads. The threaded part is the weakest part of a bolt.
When the forces acting on a bolt holding two parts together
are perpendicular to the length of the bolt, the bolt is said to
be loaded in shear. The forces trying to shear or bend the
bolt are concentrated where the two parts meet.
Choose a bolt that is long enough to place the body of
the bolt where the parts come together. If this causes the
body of the bolt to project out of the hole, use washers as
spacers. Position the nut on the bolt so the last two threads
are covered by the washers, and at least two threads project
beyond the top of the nut.
The first two threads on the end of the bolt and the last
two threads before the body are considered imperfect
because they are not fully formed and cant give the same
strength as fully formed threads. Like the top step on a
ladder, they are there, but should not be used to bear a load.
Manufacturers use a formula to determine the minimum
threaded portion of a bolt. On some short bolts, this reduces
or eliminates the body.
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99
Renewable Energy
100
Digital Power
Meters
20-CTR: Measures
AC Power up to 10 kW,
100-250 vac single or
two phase. Remote
display. Easy to install.
www.homepower.com
1-888-433-6600
www.brandelectronics.com
101
code corner
Common Mistakes
& How to Avoid Them
John Wiles
Sponsored by the Photovoltaic Systems Assistance Center,
Sandia National Laboratories
Color Codes
102
code corner
DisconnectsWhich Conductors?
Disconnects (safety switches and circuit breakers)
should never be installed in the grounded conductor of DC
PV circuits. For that matter, they are not usually allowed in
the grounded conductors of AC circuits either. When these
disconnects are installed in this manner and operated, a
grounded conductor from a PV array will become
ungrounded and will still be energized when the PV array is
sunlit. Since all grounded conductors (marked white) are
assumed to be grounded (at earth potential), it may come as
a surprising shock when one is touched and it turns out to
be energized with respect to ground.
There is a common misconception that when both
conductors of a circuit are ungrounded, it is not possible to
get shocked by touching ground and one of the conductors.
Distributed small leakage paths in PV modules and wiring
will generally prevent a truly isolated, ungrounded circuit,
and a definite shock potential usually results.
Many of the grounded SMA Sunny Boy and Xantrex PVseries high-voltage systems seem to get disconnects installed
with the positive and negative conductors both switched. See
the photo labled not to code: grounded conductor switched
on the previous page. This may come about from the switch
manufacturers tech notes that say: Use the outer two poles
of the three-pole disconnect to achieve the 600 volt DC rating.
In our PV systems, the two outer poles should be connected in
series and then used to switch only the ungrounded (normally
the positive) conductor.
As an aside, Square D has obtained a special listing on
their H361/HU 361 30-amp, 3-pole, 600 volt heavy duty
safety switch when used with PV systems. (See Access for
details.) If the PV string short-circuit current is below about
12 amps, then each of the three poles can be used as a 600
volt disconnect without connecting the poles in series. One
H361 (fused) switch could be used for all three PV strings
connected to a Sharp 3,500 watt inverter. Up to three Sunny
Boy 2500 inverters could use a single HU361 (unfused)
disconnect. The Sunny Boy inverter cannot backfeed
currents into the PV array, so DC fuses are normally not
needed when only one or two strings of modules are
connected to the inverters. Therefore, the unfused HU361
disconnect may be used.
Access
John C. Wiles, Southwest Technology Development
Institute, New Mexico State University, Box 30,001/MSC 3
SOLAR, Las Cruces, NM 88003 505-646-6105
Fax: 505-646-3841 jwiles@nmsu.edu
www.nmsu.edu/~tdi/pv.htm
Sponsor: Sandia National Laboratories, Ward Bower,
Department 6218, MS 0753, Albuquerque, NM 87185
505-844-5206 Fax: 505-844-6541 wibower@sandia.gov
www.sandia.gov/pv
Special listing information on the Square D H361/HU361
safety switch: www.squareD.com/us/products/
safetysw.nsf/DocumentsByCategory/DD5F1F9416FA23668
5256D350071EC30 or go to www.sma-america.com and
select Tech Updates
The 2002 NEC and the NEC Handbook are available from
the National Fire Protection Association (NFPA), 11 Tracy
Dr., Avon, MA 02322 800-344-3555 or 508-895-8300
Fax: 800-593-6372 or 508-895-8301 custserv@nfpa.org
www.nfpa.org
www.homepower.com
103
SunDanzer!
www.sundanzer.com
1-775-331-6600 hp@sundanzer.com
1320 Freeport, Suite 101, Sparks, NV 89431 USA
305-696-2504
975 NW 95 St.
Miami, FL 33150
ELECTRO AUTOMOTIVE
Electric Car Conversions Since 1979
Books
Videos
Kits
Components
Catalog Send $6.00 for our catalog, or visit our web site.
"Convert It" We wrote the book on electric car conversions - literally!
Send $30.00 postage paid for this hands-on how-to conversion manual,
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104
Harris
Hydroelectric
NEW
!
www.harrishydro.com
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105
Lights Out
Don Loweburg
2004 Don Loweburg
A Deeper Analysis
The North American Electric Reliability Council (NERC)
revealed a deeper level of analysis when they wrote, The
106
225
150
75
0
Jan.
1999
Jul. Feb.
1999 2000
Aug.
2000
Mar. Sep.
2001 2001
Apr. Nov.
2002 2002
May
2003
Date
Procedures
Transmission Loading
Relief Procedures
0.006
0.004
0.002
0.000
-0.002
Jan.
99
Jul.
99
Nov. May
02
03
Date
Frequency Errors
Apr.
02
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107
Access
Don Loweburg, IPP, PO Box 231, North Fork, CA 93643
559-877-7080 i2p@aol.com www.i2p.org
North American Electric Reliability Council (NERC),
Princeton Forrestal Village, 116-390 Village Blvd.,
Princeton, NJ 08540 609-452-8060 Fax: 609-452-9550
info@nerc.com www.nerc.com/about/legislation.html
Blackout: Repeating Energy History, David Morris
www.tompaine.com/feature2.cfm/ID/8646
Whats Wrong with the Electric Grid?, Eric Lerner
www.aip.org/tip/INPHFA/vol-9/iss-5/p8.html
A Micro-Grid with PV, Fuel Cells, and Energy Efficiency
http://arizonaenergy.org/Analysis/DistributedEnergy/
MicroGrids2.pdf Slightly dated but a good introduction
to the subject
www.unirac.com
The SunFrame system is U.S. patent pending.
108
UniRac, Inc.
info@unirac.com
505.242.6411
505.242.6412 Fax
Call 1-888-647-6527
Solatron Technologies Inc.
15663 Village Drive Victorville CA 92394
Http://www.partsonsale.com
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renewable
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writing for HP
Informational Content
Please include all the details! Be specific! We are more
interested in specific information than in general
information. Write from your direct experienceHome
Power is hands-on! Articles must be detailed enough that
our readers can actually use the information. Name names,
and give us actual numbers, product names, and sources.
If you are writing about someone elses system or
project, we require a written release from the owner or other
principal before we can consider printing the article.
Computer Talk
We can take text from most word processors. Save all
word processor files in TEXT or ASCII TEXT format.
This means removing all word processor formatting and
graphics. Use the Save As Text option in your word
processor.
If you want to send files larger than 5 MB (such as digital
photos), use removable media and snail mail it to us. We can
read ZIP disks (either Mac or IBM) and CD-ROMs. You can
also FTP your large files to us at ftp.homepower.com, to the
incoming folder. Please e-mail us after you have sent files
via FTP.
Photographs
Access
110
Weve reduced
our energy use
even further!
Advertise in
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111
power politics
Nuclear
WasteNIABY
Michael Welch
2004 Michael Welch
112
power politics
a wasteland and as the repository state. Nevada was not
chosen because it is the best place for the waste to go. It was
chosen because it had less political clout than the other
states being considered.
Access
Michael Welch, c/o Redwood Alliance, PO Box 293, Arcata,
CA 95518 707-822-7884
michael.welch@homepower.com
www.redwoodalliance.org
QuickCharger
C. Cranes QuickCharger is the best
battery charger Ive ever used.
Richard Perez, Things That Work!, Home Power #86
The AnswersKind Of
The big question is, how do you store reactor waste onsite in a (relatively) safe manner? Every commercial nuclear
reactor has a spent fuel pool. They look like swimming
pools, where the irradiated fuel rods from the reactor are
stored until they need to be moved. Immersion in water is
the best method of blocking the radiation so that it does not
escape into the environment. It also carries away any
radioactive particulates, which can then be recaptured in a
filter, and then becomes additional radioactive waste. My
opinion, and the opinion of many other environmental
Intelligent Discharge
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The Book on
Solar
Cookers
Our 19th Year Offgrid!
We provide excellent service & technical support.
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(559) 877-7080
A second edition,
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and revised.
Includes:
A history as well as a whos who in the
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Guidelines for designing your own cooker
Plans for building the SunStar cooker
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Tips and tricks for cooking with the sun
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114
Contact Scott.Russell@homepower.com
or 541-601-4640 for dealer terms.
Phone: 505-881-7567
FAX: 505-881-7572
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115
word power
Power Factor
Ratio of True to Apparent Power
Ian Woofenden
2004 Ian Woofenden
Resistive Load
(PF = 1.0, V & A In Phase)
Reactive Load
(PF = 0.8, V & A Out of Phase)
Time
Time
Voltage
116
Power
Amperage
Voltage
Power
Amperage
word power
apparent power to true power is called power factor (PF).
A power factor of 1 is ideal. It is when the apparent and true
power are the same.
W VA = PF
If we take the same 120 volts and 10 amps from the
example above, but the load in the circuit has a power factor
of 0.8, the power available to the load will actually be only
960 watts.
The excess energy in reactive circuits is not lost. It just
sloshes around in the circuit, bouncing back to the source.
But since losses in a circuit are tied directly to the charge
flow rate (amperage), raising the amperage in a given size of
wire means that the losses will increase. So a circuit with
bad (low) power factor will need larger wires to keep the
losses at the same level as a circuit with good (high) power
factor.
On the physics side of things, I like to picture charges
bouncing back and forth in a reactive circuit. They dont do
the work they could because the driving force (voltage) is
out of synch with the charge flow. Watts measures the
energy flow from the generating source to the load. Voltamps measures the theoretical maximum energy flow,
including the illusory reactive energy that is bounced back
to the generating source.
The practical lessons are that high power factor devices
are always going to be easier on your generating sources
they will increase efficiency in your systems. And wire
sizing must take into account the full apparent power that
the load needs, even though some of it is recycled by the
circuit.
My thanks to Hugh Piggott for going above and beyond
the call in helping me with the technical end of this column.
He says, I have seen it compared to a glass of beer. The
amount of beer in the glass is the apparent power. The liquid
is real power. The froth is reactive power. Me? I dont drink
the stuff, so I wouldnt know
Access
Ian Woofenden, PO Box 1001, Anacortes, WA 98221
ian.woofenden@homepower.com
www.homepower.com
117
Gin Pole
Wind
Generator
Used In: All tilt-up and some guyed and freestanding wind generator
installations
Guy Wires:
Not all shown
Tower
Hoisting
Cable
Gin Pole
Up
Pivot: At
tower base
Direction
of Pull
Guy wires
not shown
Tower
Tower
Base
Tower
Section
Generally, two brackets are clamped to a tower leg with bolts, and
provide a sleeve for the gin pole, which is pulled up through the brackets.
A davit or block is added on the top, and a lifting line is threaded through
before the pole top is raised out of reach.
Clamps
Hoisting
Cable
Pulley
A gin pole makes it easier to raise the tower. Try tilting up a pipe or
pole by pulling along the length of it and youll find that something may
break before anything lifts. Adding a lever at 90 degrees makes it easy to
lift the pipe.
Gin Pole
Direction
of pull
The gin pole is then bolted securely in place before any lifting is done.
After each section is in place, the gin pole and brackets are moved up to
the next section. Temporary guy ropes are necessary to keep the tower
stable.
Ian Woofenden ian.woofenden@homepower.com
adopt a library!
When Karen and I were living with kerosene lamps, we went to our
local public library looking for a better way to light up our nights. We
found nothing about small-scale renewable energy. As a result, one of
the first things we did when we started publishing Home Power sixteen
years ago was to give a subscription to our local public library.
If youd like to do the same for your public library, well split the cost of
the subscription with you. Inside the U.S., you pay $11.25 and well pay
the rest. Outside the U.S., the same offer stands, so call us for rates.
Richard Perez, Publisher
Check with your local library before signing them up. Eligible libraries must be open to the general public.
PO Box 520, Ashland OR 97520 800-707-6585 541-512-0201 subscription@homepower.com www.homepower.com
118
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119
The Worst at
Work
Kathleen Jarschke-Schultze
2004 Kathleen Jarschke-Schultze
Commuting
People who hear that I work from home always think that
makes for a cushy job. I will tell you that it is a double-edged
blade. Sure, I dont have the commute. This makes me wonder
which would be worsecommuting over dirt roads, skinny
country roads, mountain passes, and freeways, or in-town
driving? Of course winter conditions always make mountain
driving worse. Thats the kind of commute I would have. But
maybe the incredibly snarled traffic problems I see on the
morning news would be worse. Yikes!
We live in a county that has twice as many cows as
people. (This has been documented.) The whole county is
open range, meaning that livestock can be found wandering
anywhere, including in the roadway.
Yreka, our county seat, used to have only one stoplight.
The arrival of Wal-Mart spawned another stoplight. Instead
of turning it on immediately, the county covered the light
with feed sacks for about four weeks. For the next step of
integration, they turned the light to flashing yellow for
another three weeks. Finally, they brought the stoplight up
to speed and all three colors are working now. You have to
ease country folk into change, you know.
Whenever I go to a bigger city (anything over 35,000
population), it seems there are stoplights on every corner.
And you never see a herd of cows being driven down
Main Street.
Home Alone
People who travel to a workplace dont realize on a
conscious level that when you work at home, you never
leave home. Say you have a job away from home. You leave
a clean house, and eight or nine or ten hours later, you
return. Your house is still clean.
When I work at home, my house gets lived and worked
in 24/7. To cope, we have what we call our piling system.
Any and all things tend to get piled, waiting for me to return
120
Worst-Case Scenario #1
About a year ago, I was home alone sitting at my desk. I
could hear the wind in the trees outside. Automatically, I
glanced out the window toward the Whisper 1000 wind
turbine spinning atop a 60 foot (18 m) tilt-up tower. I felt
that zing of fear when I saw that a top guy cable had come
loose, and the turbine was swaying and bending the tower
more than I thought possible. Grabbing a pair of leather
gloves, I ran out the door towards the pole. My brain kept
saying that it was going to snap at any minute. How can it
bend that far and not break?
I reached the base of the tower and found the loose end
of the guy cable. It was an upper guy that vibration had
twisted out of its turnbuckle. I grabbed it and ran to the
anchor and turnbuckle. Immediately I realized that I was in
no way strong enough to pull the cable and start its
threaded bolt end back into the turnbuckle. The wind
generator is a vital part of our RE system that keeps our
home and office running. What would I do?
Solution
I ran to the shop and scrambled around until I found a
cable clamp lying on the vise bench. I kept looking around
until I found a crescent wrench. Running back to the tower,
I could see it still waving and flailing wildly in the wind. I
Solution
We had already performed the solution. We didnt go
near the fighting cats, and I put my terrier in a safe place.
Next I called the neighbors up the road and warned them to
not let their small children play outside alone, if at all. When
Bob-O went across the road to check the area where the
battle took place, he found many tufts of golden fur and a
bloody claw torn off and lying in the dirt. When he got back
to the house, he called the client, apologized for the
interruption, and continued their conversation.
I know these are not typical workplace scenarios. But I
have found that when you live remotely with renewable
energy, you need to be able to land on your feet, laughing.
Expect anything; it just might happen. Now if I could only
talk Bob-O into a candy bar vending machine for our
office/dining room.
Access
Kathleen Jarschke-Schultze is fermenting an unassuming
little Pinot Bob-O from her micro-vineyard at Chateau
Schultze in Northernmost California. c/o Home Power, PO
Box 520, Ashland, OR 97520
kathleen.jarschke-schultze@homepower.com
Worst-Case Scenario #2
A couple of years ago, Bob-O was on the phone with a
customer when he glanced out the window. To his great
www.homepower.com
www.apmhydro.com
121
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123
RE happenings
INTERNATIONAL
COSTA RICA
U.S.A.
Feb. 16-21, 04; RE for the Developing WorldHands On, Rancho Mastatal, Costa Rica. Solar
electricity, hot water, cooking, & other RE
technologies. Info: see SEI in COLORADO
listings. Coordinator: Ian Woofenden
360-293-7448
ian.woofenden@homepower.com
AUSTRIA
Mar. 3-5 04; World Sustainable Energy Days;
Wels, Austria. European Green Electricity
Forum, Megatrends of Sustainable Energy, &
an exhibition fair. Info: O..
Energiesparverband, Landstrae 45, A-4020
Linz, Austria +43-732-7720-14380
+43-732-7720-14383 office@esv.or.at
www.esv.or.at
CANADA
Alberta Sustainable Home/Office, Calgary.
Open house last Sat. every month 1-4 pm,
private tours available. Cold-climate features,
environment, conservation, RE, recycling,
efficiency, self-sufficiency, appropriate
technology, autonomous & sustainable
housing & communities. 9211 Scurfield Dr.
NW, Calgary, AB T3L 1V9 403-239-1882
jdo@ecobuildings.net www.ecobuildings.net
www.ecodeveloper.com
Vancouver EV Assoc. meeting info: PO Box
3456, 349 W. Georgia St., Vancouver, BC V6B
3Y4 604-878-9500 info@veva.bc.ca
www.veva.bc.ca
CHINA
Apr. 7-9, 04; REAsia 2004, Beijing. Marketing
RE in Asia. Info: Vivian Li, Grace Fair Intl. Ltd.
Room 1311, Tower A, Zhongyun Bldg.,
Wangjing New Industrial Zone, Chaoyang Dist.,
Beijing 100102, China ++86-10-64390338 Fax:
++86-10-64390339 vivian@gracefair.com
www.gracefair.com
124
GERMANY
Mar. 5-7, 04; Erneuerbare Energien 2004;
Bblingen, Germany. Conferences &
workshops on RE market situations. Info: see
RENEXPO entry below.
May 11-14, 04; Wind Energy Intl. Trade Fair;
Hamburg Fair Site. Info: Hamburg Messe und
Congress GmbH, PO Box 30 24 80, 20308
Hamburg, Germany +49 40 3569 2123
info@windenergy-hamburg.de
www.windenergy-hamburg.de
Oct. 21-24, 04; RENEXPO 2004; Augsburg.
Hydro power, decentralization, biofuels, solar,
biogas, energy-efficient construction. Info:
Erneuerbare Energien Kommunikations und
Information Service GmbH, Unter den Linden
15 72762 Reutlingen, Germany +49 (0)71 2130 16-0 Fax: +49 (0)71 21 - 30 16 -100
redaktion@energie-server.de www.energyserver.com
MEXICO
Mar. 2-9, 04; Build a Solar Culture Where the
Sun Shines; Akumal, Mexico. A hands-on
workshop in solar theory & installation. Info:
RENEW Wisconsin, 222 S. Hamilton St.,
Madison, WI 53703 608-819-0748
www.renewwisconsin.org
POLAND
Mar. 23-25, 04; ENEX New Energy; Kielce,
Poland. Fair specific to RE, in conjunction with
the ENEX Power Industry Fair. Info: Targi
Kielce, ul. Zakladowa 1, 25-672 +4841/365 12
12 Fax: +4841/345 62 61 enex@targikielce.pl
www.targikielce.pl/enex_start/enex.htm
SPAIN
May 16-19, 04; SCELL-2004: Intl. Conf. on the
Physics, Chemistry, & Engineering of Solar
Cells; Badajoz, Spain. Research results on
materials science & technology related to solar
energy conversion. Info: Formatex Research
Center Fax: +34/924/258-615
scell-2004@formatex.org
www.formatex.org/scell2004/scell2004.htm
ARIZONA
Feb. 23-28, 04; PV Design & Installation,
Tucson. System design, components, site
analysis, system sizing, & a hands-on
installation. Info: see SEI in Colorado listings.
Tax credits for solar in AZ. ARI SEIA 602-2583422 www.azsolarindustry.org
Scottsdale, AZ. Living with the Sun; free
energy lectures, 3rd Thurs. each month, 7-9
PM, City of Scottsdale Urban Design Studio.
Dan Aiello 602-952-8192; or AZ Solar Center
www.azsolarcenter.org
RE happenings
CALIFORNIA
Mar. 1-3, 04; AEST 2004, Alternate Energy
Sources & Technology; Marina del Rey, CA. For
researchers & practitioners, on recent
advances in RE. Info: IASTED, 4500 16th Ave.
NW #80, Calgary, AB Canada T3B 0M6
403-288-1195 Fax: 403-247-6851
calgary@iasted.org www.iasted.org
Mar. 8-13, 04; Womens PV Design &
Installation, Santa Cruz, CA. System design,
components, site analysis, system sizing, &
hands-on installation. Info: see SEI in Colorado
listings.
Mar. 12, 04; Intro to RE. Solar, wind, &
microhydro for homeowners. Info: see SEI in
Colorado listings.
Mar. 15-20, 04; PV & Installation, San
Francisco. System design, components, site
analysis, system sizing, & a hands-on
installation. Info: see SEI in Colorado listings.
Apr. 8-10, 04; Understanding Grid-Connected
Solar Electric Systems. Humboldt State Univ.,
Arcata, CA. For homes or businesses. Info:
HSU Office of Extended Education
707-826-3731
Apr. 16-17, 04; Utility Interactive PV workshop
San Diego. System design, components, site
analysis, & system sizing. Info: see SEI in
Colorado listings.
Apr. 27-30, 04; Hydrogen: A Clean Energy
Choice; Los Angeles. National Hydrogen Assoc.
conference & expo. Info: NHA,1800 M St. NW
#300, Washington, DC 20036 202-223-5547
Fax: 202-223-5537
HydrogenConference@ttcorp.com
www.hydrogenconference.org
Arcata, CA. Campus Center for Appropriate
Technology, Humboldt State Univ. Workshops
& presentations on renewable & sustainable
living. CCAT, HSU, Arcata, CA 95521
707-826-3551 ccat@axe.humboldt.edu
www.humboldt.edu/~ccat
Rebates for PV & wind. CA Emerging
Renewables Buydown Program, CA Energy
Comm. 800-555-7794 or 916-654-4058
renewable@energy.state.ca.us
www.consumerenergycenter.org/erprebate
Energy Efficiency Building Standards for CA.
CA Energy Comm. 800-772-3300
www.energy.ca.gov/title24
Solar e-Clips, free weekly e-mail newsletter. CA
solar energy news & info. Subscribe:
www.californiasolarcenter.org
COLORADO
MISSOURI
Feb. 8, 04; Winter RE Fair; New Bloomfield,
MO. Wind generators, PV systems, SDHW,
passive solar, hydro power, green building,
biodiesel, solar carts, & more. Free. Info:
Missouri RE Center 800-228-5284
www.moreenergy.org
MONTANA
Whitehall, MT. Sage Mountain Center:
sustainable living tours, seminars, workshops,
PV, green building, more. SMC, 79 Sage
Mountain Trail, Whitehall, MT 59759
406-494-9875 cborton@sagemountain.org
www.sagemountain.org
NEW JERSEY
IOWA
Prairiewoods & Cedar Rapids, IA. Iowa RE
Assoc. meets 2nd Sat. every month at 9 AM.
Call for changes. IRENEW, PO Box 355,
Muscatine, IA 52761 563-288-2552
irenew@irenew.org www.irenew.org
KENTUCKY
Mt. Vernon, KY. Appalachia: Science in the
Public Interest. Projects & demos in solar
electricity, solar hot water, gardening,
sustainable forestry, more. ASPI, 50 Lair St.,
Mt. Vernon, KY 40456 606-256-0077
solar@a-spi.org www.a-spi.org
MASSACHUSETTS
NEW MEXICO
Apr. 04; Natural House Building, Kingston,
NM. Learn how to build with earth & straw.
Hands-on sessions including straw bale,
adobe, pressed block, cob, & natural plasters.
Info: see SEI in Colorado listings.
NEW YORK
Apr. 12-17, 04; PV Design & Installation,
Woodstock, NY. System design, components,
site analysis, system sizing, & a hands-on
installation. Info: see SEI in Colorado listings.
NORTH CAROLINA
MICHIGAN
Urban Enviro Discussion, Ferndale, MI. 2nd
Wed. each month, 7-9 pm. Sustainability,
energy efficiency & conservation, RE, green
building, & consumer issues. Potluck. Free. The
GreenHouse, 22757 Woodward #210, Ferndale,
MI 48220 313-218-1628
www.hometown.aol.com/ecadvocate
Intro to Solar, Wind, & Hydro. West Branch, MI.
1st Fri. each month. System design & layout
for homes or cabins. Info: 989-685-3527
gotter@m33access.com
May 14-15, 04; Solar Home Design for NetZero Energy. PV, solar thermal, passive solar
for Net-Zero energy home in any climate.
Info: see SL Energy in International listings.
www.homepower.com
Saxapahaw, NC. How to Get Your SolarPowered Home. Call for dates. Solar Village
Institute PO Box 14, Saxapahaw, NC 27340
336-376-9530 info@solarvillage.com
www.solarvillage.com
OREGON
May 14-16, 04; Living Better in the NW,
Sustainable Solutions for the Rogue Valley;
Jackson County Fair Grounds, OR. RE,
transportation, organic farming, community
design, science of sustainability, sustainable
home building, & resource mngmt. Info:
Tristan Ragsdale, ECOS, Southern OR Univ.
541-552-8512 ragsdalet@students.sou.edu
Jul. 10-14, 04; SOLAR 2004; Portland.
American Solar Energy Society national
conference. Info: ASES 303-443-3130 ext.103
www.ases.org bchowe@ases.org
125
RE happenings
Cottage Grove, OR. Adv. Studies in Appropriate
Tech., 10 weeks, 14 interns per quarter.
Aprovecho Research Center, 80574 Haxelton
Rd., Cottage Grove, OR 97424 541-942-0302
apro@efn.org www.efn.org/~apro
TEXAS
WASHINGTON STATE
PENNSYLVANIA
Penn. Solar Energy Assoc. meeting info: PO
Box 42400, Philadelphia, PA 19101
610-667-0412 rose-bryant@erols.com
UTAH
RHODE ISLAND
Peoples Power & Light: buyers groups for
green electricity & bio heating oil. Also info &
programs to promote sustainable energy. Info:
401-861-6111 info@ripower.org
www.ripower.org
VERMONT
Feb. 7-8 04; Designing Solar Energy Systems
Workshop; Warren, VT. Basics of designing &
installing PV & SDHW systems. Info:
Yestermorrow Design/Build School, 189 VT Rt.
100, Warren, VT 05674 802-496-5545
888-496-5541 kate@yestermorrow.org
www.yestermorrow.org
VIRGINIA
Info & services on practical solar energy apps
in VA. VA Solar Energy Assoc., the VA Solar
Council, & the VA SEIA. Info: VA Div. of Energy
804-692-3218
TENNESSEE
Apr. 21-24, 04; Solar Electric Design, Earth
Advocates Research Farm (The Farm). Basic
PV, hardware, system design, installation, &
troubleshooting. Info: Ed Eaton, Our Sun Solar,
PO Box 1876, Paonia, CO 81428 970-948-5304
hareef99@yahoo.com
WISCONSIN
MREA workshops. Mar. 6, Custer: Energy
Efficient Construction; Mar. 13, Custer: Intro to
RE; Mar. 27-28, Custer: Basic PV. Also,
Alternative Constuction, Intermediate PV, Solar
Domestic Hot Water, & Solar Space Heating.
Info: MREA, 7558 Deer Rd., Custer, WI 54423
715-592-6595 mreainfo@wi-net.com
www.the-mrea.org
HUMAN POWER
GENERATOR
126
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127
HP letters
Errata
After printing the HP98 article, Using DC in Your Off-Grid
Home, we discovered that an error had been introduced during
the publishing process. In the test data table on page 95, the
efficiency figure for Solar Converters EQ12/24-20 should have
been 93.8%, and the output volts should have been 12.5. We
regret any inconvenience this may have caused our readers, and
any misrepresentation of the fine products of Solar Converters,
Inc. While we were too late to stop the presses for the printed
version of our magazine, we were able to make the appropriate
changes in the electronic edition of HP98. Michael Welch, for the
Home Power editorial staff.
128
Lightning Grounding
I have a Whisper 900 and a 95 foot, three-legged, selfsupporting tower waiting to be installed to supplement my
900 watt photovoltaic array. I have one concernlightning.
Three wind generators in my area have been struck. The
damage is substantial every time.
Ive heard two explanations for the benefits of
grounding the tower structure with respect to protection.
One is that grounding will actually make the structure
nonattractive to lightning. The other explanation is
exactly the reverse, that the grounding system is actually
catering to the lightning by providing the current a direct
and controlled path to ground, and thus protecting valuable
electric components and living structures from high voltage
harm.
Which is the answer? The second explanation seems
more plausible, but I have little knowledge of electrical
behavior. If it is so, the prospect of 100 percent protection
seems unattainable. Wouldnt it be necessary to have a
lightning rod that extended higher than the generator
blades? And wouldnt you have to anticipate the worst and
use copper conductors of incredible thickness? Enlighten
me, please! Jack Eastman, Fairfield, Iowa
jacktoni@kdsi.net
Hi Jack, Lightning protection is 30 percent applied physics, 30
percent luck (karma), 30 percent voodoo, and the disposition of the
remaining 10 percent is unknown. There is no sure bet here.
From a physics standpoint, grounding metal structures bleeds
off static charges that may accumulate during electrical storms.
This places the metal object (tower, PV racks, or radio antennas)
at the same potential as the ground. This reduces the likelihood of
a direct strike. Lightning is just like any electricity, just incredibly
intense, powerful, and quick. A lightning bolt looks for the path of
least resistance to ground. If static charges build up on metal
structures, they are at higher potential than the ground and
attract lightning because they present an easier path of less
potential difference.
HP letters
From a physics standpoint, if an outside structure takes a
direct lightning strike, the grounding conductors may or may not
make a path for this strike to go to ground. Considering the
amount of energy carried by a lightning bolt, the grounding
conductor, all its connections, and grounding rod or plane must be
capable of conducting tens of thousands of amperes in a
microsecond. Were talking copper conductors as big around as
your arm... Thinking that a #8 copper wire and a 6 foot ground rod
is going to do this job is a fantasy. If gear gets a direct strike, there
is sure to be damage.
I spent three years operating a commercial, 100 KW TV
transmitter on top of 7,500 foot tall Mount Ashland. On top of
this mountain, we had a 260 foot tall metal transmitting tower.
This tower was protected by multiple grounds with cables over 4
inches thick feeding six huge ground rods. The electronics were
guarded by every known form of isolation and protectioncost
was no object. During lightning season, wed sometimes take up
to six direct hits daily. We always lost some of the electronic gear
inside the transmitter building. Ive removed electronics with a
hacksaw when they welded themselves to steel racks and conduits.
Ive watched blue fire coursing across the racks of delicate
electronics while I sat on a wooden stool in the middle of the room
too petrified to even consider moving or touching anything.
From a karma and voodoo standpoint, I recommend thinking
good thoughts and burning copious quantities of Nepali temple
incense under wind generator towers and PV racks. And avoid
listening to the Grateful Deads Fire on the Mountain during
electrical storms. Richard Perez richard.perez@homepower.com
Excess PV Heat
Im in the Orlando, Florida, area and Im considering a
grid-tied PV system to help reduce my utility bill. I can see
a panel on my roof easily getting over 140F on a sunny day
here. If youve ever been to the central Florida area, one
attribute of homes around here is that many have pools.
Many of those homeowners with pools have installed solar
water heating collectors to heat the pools and thereby
extend their useful seasons in our area. A pool, in this case,
represents a fairly large source of 85F water. I would love to
know if theres anyone out there using pool flow to cool
their PV arrays and heat their pool. If I could drop the
temperature of the cell by 10 or 20F, what would I gain in
conversion efficiency? Bill Bragg Bill@searssiding.com
Hi Bill, Ive never heard of anybody trying to heat a pool with
the excess heat coming off PV modules. There have been a couple
of designs in R & D incorporating air collectors on the back of PV
modules for space heating. None of these made it to
commercialization. Heating a pool normally requires about half
the pool surface area in collector surface area (collectors made for
the job), which is normally a good deal larger than a home PV
array. The quick answer is, yes you can cool the modules with air
or water and improve the output and gather the wasted heat; no,
people dont do it on any regular basis because of the cost-tobenefit ratio. Too little heat is gathered and too little efficiency is
gained to make the expenditure worthwhile, so far. The industry
needs a new product or a good inexpensive way to modify modules
to make the idea reality. Cheers, Chuck Marken
chuck@aaasolar.com
Places to Start
I was just watching a show on Tech TV, where you were
discussing your efforts with home power development. Im
all for it! But my technical skills are measured in negative
values... I was wondering how easy or difficult it would be
for me to find somebody with the expertise and ability to tell
me what I can do to make my home less dependant on the
grid. I live in Montreal, Quebec, pretty close to downtown,
in fact. My roof is available and Ive got a backyard. Didier
research@thoughttechnology.com
Hello Didier, There are some great nontechnical ways to get
started, and in fact these are the best places for everyone, even the
technically minded, to get started. If you have a family, institute a
reward-based system for your family members to encourage energy
conservation. You can do things like getting them to turn off the
lights when leaving rooms, and doing only full loads of laundry with
just cold water. Turn down your water heater so that it doesnt
produce scalding water that needs to be mixed with lots of cold just
to use. Try line drying laundry instead of running it through the
dryer; it even works well to hang laundry inside the home when the
weather is poor. Just spend a weekend going around the house,
looking for ways to conserve and implement conservation.
Then, get more energy efficient appliances. A big one is to
swap out your incandescent lightbulbs for high quality compact
fluorescent bulbs. Other big energy hogs are the washing machine,
water heater, and refrigerator, which should be replaced with as
energy-efficient models as you can find.
Next come the parts that most folks cant do themselves. Get a
solar hot water system. These usually also make economic sense,
with paybacks as short as four years. Have someone come out and
look at your home for a possible solar or wind-electric system. This
is the most expensive thing you can do, especially if you dont take
care of the conservation and efficiency things first. You can
research dealers in your area from our Web site. Michael Welch
michael.welch@homepower.com
www.homepower.com
129
HP letters
suggestions? Thanks for your help. Brian Clark
bclark1111@worldnet.att.net
Hi Brian, A high pole mount for heating collectors is
uncharted ground for us. Weight, wind load, and piping will all
have some bearing on this. Three or four poles making a kind of
trestle attached to the house is a possibility. We have done this
before, but never as high as 20 feet plus. I would suggest a roof
mount, even though it might be hard to do. I realize that an 8 in
12 metal roof will need some bracing to allow you to work on the
roof, and the way the pitch runs is also a factor. Is it out of the
question to mount the collectors high on the south gable?
A drainback tank is a project for a savvy do-it-yourselfer, but
3 inch pipe is probably not suitable. You should have a minimum
of 2 gallons per collector, and 3 inch pipe will have a capacity of
one gallon per 2.75 lineal feet, or 5.5 feet per collector. I have never
seen a DB tank less than about 6 inches in diameter (1.5 gallons
per lineal foot). Most are about 12 inches or so in diameter. Hope
this helps. Chuck Marken chuck@aaasolar.com
Greenhouse Heating
130
HP letters
2,250 instantaneous watts of real output, and you need a battery
to store it in, since the heater probably runs mostly when the sun
is not shining. An installed battery-based system is probably
going to cost you around US$9 per watt, so you can see that it
would be prohibitively expensive to do this.
There may be better ways. Solar hot water with hydronic
heating for your greenhouse will probably be the most costeffective, and will have a payback in a much shorter time than
using PV. See the article in HP96 on heating a large greenhouse
with solar-hydronics, so you can see how they did it and consider
it for your smaller greenhouse and home.
Another option is to install a grid-intertied PV system
without batteries that will offset some of your utility usage. This
will cost less than a battery-based system, and will be a more
efficient use of your PV panels. And with a system like this, you
install the system you can afford, though the bigger the system, the
cheaper it is per watt, and the more utility usage it will offset.
Finally, take a look at the article in this issue about an efficient
greenhouse in Pennsylvania. Theyre using a double-layer system
over their planting beds that in effect adds another blanket.
Michael Welch michael.welch@homepower.com
www.homepower.com
131
HP letters
wave inverter is cost. But as with everything cheap, the full price
isnt in dollars. Youll get reduced performance from all your
appliancestheyll run hotter and not last as long. Some things
may even fry.
I think of modified square wave inverters as Third World
electricity. The popular Xantrex (formerly Trace) DR series was
named after the Dominican Republic, which has very poor grid
power quality. Modified square wave inverters are a step up to
those folks, but a big step down from U.S. grid power quality.
Even within the so-called sine wave inverters, there are
variations in quality. Xantrexs reliable SW series has lower power
quality than some other inverters on the market, such as the
Exeltech and OutBack lines. HP is working on an inverter
comparison article. Were considering not even covering modified
square wave inverters. That should tell you that we think they are
old technology, and not suitable for modern RE systems. Ian
Woofenden ian.woofenden@homepower.com
Hello Nancy and Lars, Id like to second Ians comments on
inverters. Only consider sine wave models! Over the last 30 years,
Ive owned and operated well over a dozen invertersabout half of
these were modified square wave. For the last six years, Ive run
nothing but sine wave models and Id never go back. Not only are
my appliances happier, they are also more efficient when powered
by a sine wave inverter. For example, both our deep well pump and
our microwave oven are around 30 percent more efficient. This
means more water pumped for less energy, and food is heated faster
while using less energy. If you consider the savings in energy
alone, the sine wave inverters pay for themselves very quickly.
Richard Perez richard.perez@homepower.com
132
HP letters
preference is usually based on maintenance issuestrackers
require some maintenance. I figure that we get an annual energy
boost of more than 30 percent on the modules we have on trackers
here. To me this is worth occasional maintenance. Richard Perez
richard.perez@homepower.com
Hi Dan, The solar shingle products Ive seen have an
additional problem beyond track record. They have lots of
connections and lots of roof penetrations. Im glad I wont be the
guy to install and troubleshoot these systems. The laminated metal
roofing product looks better to me, since all the connections can be
made at the roof peak. But its a bit early to tell how well this thinfilm product will last. Crystalline modules have been in the field
for 30-plus years.
I tend to be critical of trackers. They make sense in some
applications, and they are certainly fun, and boost output in the
short term, especially in summer. But putting a 30 to 40 year
product (PVs) on a 10 (?) year product is questionable to me, and
the calculations used to promote trackers dont ever seem to
include the maintenance, troubleshooting, repair, and
replacement, or the fact that the increased output in off-grid
systems is mostly when we dont need increased output. I like
crystalline PVs because they are reliable, durable, and long
lasting. Putting them on trackers downgrades that simple
perfection. Ian Woofenden ian.woofenden@homepower.com
Datalogging Systems
Ive been wanting to write to HP for months now, but
just never could break away from all the things Im into long
enough to do it. HP95 put faces to names and that sorta
made the HP staff seem like friends somehow. I first want to
say that I think your magazine is super; I always find time
to sit down and read it. I even read the ads!
About three years ago, I installed a 4 KW PV system on
my house in southern California. I installed the forty
Siemens SR100 panels on the roof myself, with lots of help
from my sons and their friends. I was a little surprised at
how hard it was to find electricians who were familiar with
photovoltaic systems. My first attempt to hire an
experienced electrician knowledgeable about PV systems
ended in semi-disaster and we parted company. I finally
www.homepower.com
133
HP letters
located the Break brothers of Crescenta-Canada Electric in
La Canada, California. These are two outstanding
electricians (one of whom has a small off-grid system
himself) who wired up the AC side of the system and made
sure the two Xantrex SW4024 inverters were wired up to the
grid and house properly. We have since become great
friends (sharing RE seems to have that effect on people).
The system was permitted and inspected, and I have to
say that I read and re-read all of John Wiles articles on the
NEC relating to PV systems before starting (an incredible
wealth of informationthanks, John). There were a few
pushups I had to do to get the permits though. The county
folks didnt have a category for installing inverters; they
didnt know whether to call it a transformer or a power
panel. We settled on transformer because the permit was
cheaper. Also had a nice lady from the county drop by to see
if our property taxes would be affected. She haltingly asked
me, Whats a photovoltaic? adding that no one in her
office knew the answer. To her credit, she was enthusiastic
enough about the project to simply record it as roof
repairs, not wanting to have it subjected to any increase in
taxes. (California has exempted photovoltaic systems from
the property tax, but her office apparently hadnt gotten the
word.)
I got my rebate from the California Energy Commission
without too much trouble, but its a lot of paperwork. I
would advise California readers contemplating doing
something like this to very closely track their expenditures
because the CEC will want everything you have. And follow
their guidelines! The rebate is worth it though. (Im not sure
what the current state of the rebate program is now since the
big budget crisis hit in California, but theres info on the
CEC
Web
site
if
anybodys
interested.
See
www.consumerenergycenter.org/index.html, select Rebates,
Grants, and Loans, and check out renewable energy
rebates.)
One very pleasant surprise was how Southern California
Edison responded to my request to grid tie. Contrary to
what I had heard about electric utilities, they were very
cooperative. Of course, I had to provide evidence of permits
and inspections, but I had done that anyway. I had thought
that since I was taking business away from them, they
would be a real pain, but just the opposite was true. They
were very courteous and helpful and promptly authorized
the net metering grid tie. We are now considered a power
generating facility.
It will take more than a few years to get payback from
my system but, knowing that Im immune to prolonged grid
outages (I have four L-16s I use only for backup) and that
my electric bill has been cut in half, Im very satisfied with
the system. And watching my meter go backwards during
the day is just plain cool!
Now for the real reason Im writing. I wanted to monitor
my PV system on my computer. All our household
computers are running under Macintosh or Linux operating
systems, and I didnt want to give up my trusty Mac for a
PC just so I could use one of the off-the-shelf applications
available to do this kind of thing.
134
HP letters
HP , we end up using PCs. Wed love to find comparable software and gear for Macs.
HP Tech Editor Joe Schwartz says that LabVIEW is now available for Macs. This is a
full-on DAQ design program, and doesnt come cheap. Its not something that one-time
users would want to invest in.
Overall, your experience is rather typical of what Ive seen for folks wanting to
datalog their RE systems. Theres a real hole in the RE product mix waiting to be
filleda plug-and-play datalogging system that nongeniuses can afford and install.
Since our industry is still small and young, I guess it should be no big surprise that we
dont have this yet, but Im looking forward to maturity, and the ability to easily keep
track of PV, wind, and hydro output, insolation, wind speed, etc. Regards, Ian Woofenden
ian.woofenden@homepower.com
AWP
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135
ozonal notes
Communications
Off-Grid
Richard Perez
2004 Richard Perez
Cell Phones
The advent of cellular telephones has made our
radiotelephone systems obsolete. Karen and I each have our
own cell phone, and we use external antennas to link up to
a local mountaintop cell site about 15 miles (24 km) from us.
This has proved to be far more reliable and much cheaper
than operating our own radiotelephone system.
The external, cell phone, beam antennas are of the Yagi
design, with fifteen elements each. They look like a small TV
antenna and are about 3 feet (0.9 m) long. They cost around
US$200 each and greatly boost the operating range of the
cell phone.
Each antenna is fed by special, low loss, RF coaxial cable
called Heliax. This cable is about 1/2 inch (13 mm) in
diameter and costs about US$1 per foot. A short, thin coax
adapter connects the large diameter Heliax to the cell phone. As
with all antennas, these should be located as high as possible
(we have ours mounted on a mast on the roof), and pointed at
the nearest cell site. By using these antennas, our cell phones
went from no signal at all inside the house, to a full-scale signal
that is rock solid into the cellular telephone network.
136
Satellite Internet
Computer communications were still very slow until the
advent of direct-to-satellite systems. Three years ago, we
installed a StarBand 360 system. This system is detailed in
HP84 , page 108. With this StarBand system, we were able to
directly connect to the Internet via a satellite. This system
required a Windows-based PC to operateit would not
play directly into our Macintosh computers. We used the PC
as a proxy server with a program called WinProxythis
served up the Internet to the various Macs on our local area
network (LAN).
After virtually no Internet service at all, StarBand was
greatspeeds up to 500 KBPS on downloads and up to 150
KBPS on uploads. While the cost was high, about US$700 for
the hardware with installation, plus US$70 per month, it
was worth it. For the first time, our remote homestead had
real computer telecommunications. This type of direct to
satellite Internet access is really the only solution for off-grid
folks, or for those without cable or DSL access and with slow
phone lines.
Its easy to get spoiled by high speed Internet access. At
our downtown office, we have high speed cable, and it runs
far faster than the StarBand 360 service. I imagine that our
business is much like other businesseswe are all doing
ozonal notes
more work online and continually becoming more
dependent on the functionality of the Internet. Several
months ago, I heard that StarBand began offering a higher
speed service for remote home offices, called StarBand 480.
When I investigated StarBand 480 further, I discovered
that in addition to greater speed, the service worked
differently than the earlier StarBand 360 service. The 480
modem does not require a PC to operate. It would play
directly into our LAN and into our Macs. For me, this was
as big an attraction as the higher speed.
The PC server we were using on the StarBand 360
service was a pain. I was forced to deal with the Windows
operating system and this PC server had to be operating all
day, every day. At the time, laptops were far more expensive
than desktops, and had fewer features. We also used the PC
as a file server (the machine contained three, 60 GB hard
drives and we routinely used them all), before the
magazines production moved to our office in town. This
desktop server was consuming about 1.7 KWH per day to
provide us with Internet access. Eliminating this server
would save us enough energy to run a large
refrigerator/freezerroughly the energy equivalent of
buying five, new, 100 watt, PV modules at our location.
So we recently upgraded our StarBand system to the
new 480 service. Its modem draws 28 watts and has a power
Access
Richard Perez, Home Power, PO Box 520, Ashland, OR
97520 541-941-9716 Fax: 541-512-0343
richard.perez@homepower.com www.homepower.com
StarBand Communications Inc., 1750 Old Meadow Road,
McLean, VA 22102 800-478-2722 www.starband.com
Advanced Communication Solutions, 7136 E 2nd St., Ste.
101, Prescott Valley, AZ 86314 928-772-7515
Fax: 928-772-3321 www.advanced-comm-solutions.com
Cellular telephone external antennas and amplifiers
www.homepower.com
137
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140
Gas to Electric
Hello to all at HP, I am considering converting a riding
mower from gas to electric. What I need info on is
determining the size motor needed. Does a mower with a 16
hp gas engine need an equal size electric motor? From what
I have seen in auto conversions, this does not seem to be the
case, but how do you determine what is needed? I am
planning to use most of the riding mower as is, with a belt
driven transaxle and mower deck. Maybe this is too
involved for a simple answer; if so, please point me the right
direction and I will take it from there. Thank you and keep
up the great job. Dennis Fry fry@mwt.net
Dennis, Youre right that you cant simply match electric
horsepower to gas horsepower. Thats because gas engines and
electric motors are rated differently. Gas engines are typically
rated for peak hp, while electric motors are generally rated for
continuous hp.
Your best bet for sizing components would be to look at
systems in similar electric vehicles. In your case, I would suggest
looking at the Gorilla at www.gorillavehicles.com. This is a utility
vehicle of a similar size to a riding mower, and can in fact be used
with mower attachments. You might also get some help from the
Elec-Trak Owners Club at www.elec-trak.org. The Elec-Trak is a
riding garden mower/tractor that is out of production, but still has
many devoted users. Shari Prange & Mike Brown, Home Power
Transportation Editors electro@cruzio.com
Q&A
Im preparing to build a small building to mount water
panels on, with a 200 gallon storage tank inside. I can get
free glass and a free tank. Id love the challenge of building
my own (pipes, aluminum sheets, insulation, glass, etc.).
Thanks for any leads. Paul Melanson, Nova Scotia Canada
Paul_Melanson@intertan.com
Hi Paul, Building an insulated enclosure with glass on one
side is not rocket science and well within the realm of do-ityourselfers. The only part of building a collector that might be
considered high tech is the riser tube to absorber plate bonding.
The tubes and plate must have good thermal conductivity or the
collector will perform poorly.
There are a couple of ways that a do-it-yourselfer can build a
decent collector from scratch, but the methods of bonding riser
tubes to the absorber plate are somewhat sensitiveproprietary,
trade secret type stuff. The way most collector manufacturers do
this is with a constant weld, braze, or solder joint between the tube
and plate. This is tedious and somewhat expensive if done by hand,
but can be done with 95/5 solder if a copper absorber plate is used
(this should not be a selective surface absorber, just black paint).
We have seen many plates in older collectors debond (the riser
tubes separate from the plate), and assume that this is due to the
manufacturer using a lower melting point 50/50 solder to make
the joint. Some manufacturers have used a mechanical crimp to
make the bond; some have used thermally conductive adhesives.
Some of these have worked well; some have not.
There may be a how-to article sometime in the next year or so
on building your own collector if we can convince the right people
that divulging a little information really wont hurt their business.
Any good points on the subject to help convince them are
welcomed. Cheers, Chuck Marken chuck@aaasolar.com
Both are good tools for long and efficient battery serviceusing
one doesnt mean that the other is unnecessary. See my article on
battery care and maintenance in HP98. Richard Perez
richard.perez@homepower.com
sunelec.com
Liquidation Sale
Equalization
Dear Richard, There is a discussion going on here on our
3 by 4 mile island (where all electricity is solar or wind with
generator charging in winter, and all phones are cell
phones), about the need for equalization when using one or
more desulfators. I understand you to have reported that
equalization is needed, if not to clean the plates, but also to
stir up the acid, if I understood the third-hand report
correctly. The folks at InnovativeEnergy.com, which makes
the desulfator we are using (several versions are made by
different companies), answered my inquiry: No
equalization is necessary. The primary purpose of
equalization is to shed sulfation off the battery plates. The
desulfator prevents any accumulation.
If the secondary purpose is to mix the acid, how much
equalization is needed to do this, as distinguished from
necessary to effect the primary purpose, that is, to clean the
plates? The reason I ask is that often equalization is done
with a generator, which takes fuel. Is there an optimum for
merely mixing the acid that doesnt require so much added
energy? Sincerely, Bill Appel, Waldron, Washington (and a
faithful reader) APPELLLB@aol.com
Hello Bill, Equalizing charges are necessary even if an
electronic desulfator is in use. The equalizing charge brings all the
cells in the battery up to the same state of chargefull. The
electronic desulfator aids this by breaking up large sulfate crystals.
www.homepower.com
141
readers marketplace
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918-520-7711 or wjjcg7@cox.net 2827
N. Kingston Ct. Tulsa OK 74115
HP9928
DC SUBMERSIBLE WELL PUMPS.
Complete, ready to install. $187
includes IMMEDIATE FREE SHIPPING.
Visit www.nemopumps.com or call
1-877-684-7979 HP9918
PHOTOVOLTAICS AS LOW AS
$3.75/watt @ NO MINIMUM! Complete
Solar Grid-tie kits, RV Power Kits, Solar
Air Heaters, & much more!
Catalog/Design Guide = $4.
RenewableElectricity.com
503-641-3732. HP9930
www.homepower.com
APPROPRIATE TECHNOLOGY
MECHANICAL DESIGN &
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
PROTECTION. Deevolution.net. James
Baker, 114 Mono Ave, Fairfax, CA
94930 (415) 453-2910 ALSO, SMALL
VENTURE CAPITAL SCHEME NEEDED
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OF TREE-TOP WINDMILL DESIGN.
HP9941
HOUSE FOR SALE Live in fairyland!
Off-grid 2-story, 1 BR, 1 bath; 2 cabins
for addl BRs. 450 watts PV, 6 heavyduty Surette batteries. Some propane
appliances. 21.95 acres of woods on
Davis Stream in Washington, Maine.
25 miles inland from
Camden/Rockland. $136,500. Email
cloechunn@rcn.com or call 207-3381147 HP9942
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143
advertisers index
AAA Solar Supply 95
ABS Alaskan 115
Abundant Renewable Energy 135
Adopt a Library 118
Advanced Communication
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Alternative Energy
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Baileys Inc 79
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BP Solar 2
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CheapestSolar.com (ZAP) 139
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Electron Connection 60
Energy Outfitters 6 & 7
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Evergreen Solar 21
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Gorilla Vehicles 101
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Helios Energies 35
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Home Power Sub Form
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Homepower.com 122
Hutton Communications 87
Hydrocap 104
Hydroscreen Co LLC 127
Inverter Repair 109
Jack Rabbit Energy Systems 119
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Junghans Solar Watches 127
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Kyocera Solar Inc OBC
Coming...
Light It Technologies 79
Liquid Sun Hydro 85
MK Battery/East Penn Mfg 54
Morningstar 115
MREA Workshops 117
NE Sustainable Energy Assoc
(NESEA) 123
New Electric Vehicles-Closeout 80
North Country Sustainable Energy
Fair 141
Northern Arizona Wind & Sun
105
Northwest Energy Storage
53, 79, 115
Offline 114
OutBack Power Systems 37
Planetary Systems Inc 139
Powerdock by JRV Products 119
PowerPod Corporation 126
Powertech Solar Ltd 139
Quick Start Specials 80
Rae Storage Battery Company 20
RAM Energy Systems 36
Renewable Energy Videos 127
RightHand Engineering 123
Rolls Battery Engineering 94
RWE SCHOTT Solar IBC
San Juan College 135
Sharp Solar Systems Division 11
Simmons 139
SMA America Inc 4
Solar Converters 70
Solar Depot IFC
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144
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