OK, so I know this sounds like a weird question, but I've seen info somewhere that I cannot now find. I am a photographer who will be boondocking for up to 7 days at a time, and am trying to develop my own set of 'best practices' before taking delivery.
Anyway, if I am remembering correctly, the basic gist was that if you are relying on solar for days on end, it was better to charge the computer while *not* using it, and use the computer only via its battery if possible.
Has anyone evaluated this, or ever heard anything about someone addressing it?
The other thing I'm curious about is charging camera batteries, as this can be a struggle for me to keep up after a good astro night (I sometimes go through 3+ LP-6 batteries in a night). I'm considering buying an
after-market 6V charger, but am unsure if it's any more efficient that just using the inverter.
Anyway, if anyone could shed me some light, I'd appreciate it! We're within a week of delivery!!!
-Jeff
Comments
Former steward of a 2017 T@B S Max
Jeff --Front Range of Colorado
I do not know if you need a Pure Sine Wave inverter for your camera batteries. But if you buy a Pure Sine Wave inverter, you’ll use one on anything that needs to be plugged in while you are not connected to shore power.
2021 T@B 320S Boondock “The T@B”
Towed by a white 2019 Ford F-150 4x4 Supercab, 3.5L V6 Ecoboost “The Truck”
Considering a 2024 TaB 400 with all the option packages (full lithium),
2023 Jeep Gladiator Sport S, Max Tow Package.
Laptops get hot. Hot things waste energy. charging hot things=bad. This could be a "zero-sum game" because you can waste heat energy with the onboard computer batteries or your you can waste heat energy with camper batteries. But, I think your lithium computer batteries are better able to cope with the high-power and high-heat consumption when you compare it to your camper's battery system. Then overnight charging your computer's batteries at a slower pace will be better for you camper's system.
Of course when your laptop finally runs out of steam, then you need to plug it in. It would be nice if there were more DC input options for laptops
Unplugging from AC power also puts the laptop into some lower power modes that are helpful for conserving power. It turns off unused processors and peripherals and decreases screen brightness. If you are familiar with your computer's advanced power settings, you can do this when you are plugged in too.
For native DC devices like computers, I wouldn't worry about pure sine wave inverters versus modified. In these cases you are going from DC to AC and then back to DC. The modified sine wave, which is square, just goes back to a flat DC circuit, so it doesn't matter. The issue becomes more about noise and you shouldn't see too much noise in a camper unless you are on the same circuit with a running fan, and even then it shouldn't be an issue when running through a good transformer with the capacitors they have.
As for charging camera batteries. This is another annoying DC to AC and back to DC problem (power lost to heat in this conversion). There are DC chargers for most camera batteries, and they work well. I use them in my car to keep charging batteries while I am on the go. I also use them in the camper. When I was driving cross country with my rooftop tent, I used my goal zero battery to charge batteries. I charged the goal zero with the car during the day and then charged the batteries on the GoalZero at night. I still carry the goal zero as a backup. It's a good little gadget.
As for the solar side of the equation, all the standard calculations apply. I was looking at the charging brick for my high-end dell laptop. It's max power draw is 130 watts. That's a significant power consumption. In the simplest terms. One of my 100 watt solar panels in full sun runs approximately hour-for hour with my laptop (it probably doesn't draw the full 130 watts). I did some photo editing and writing on this laptop in my camper a few weeks ago and took my 100AH AGM system down from 100% to 70% in about 6 hours (with lights and fan too).
My experience with the GoalZero suggests that the camera batteries are fairly negligible although some are more than 2000 mAH and that wouldn't seem negligible. That GoalZero is rated 14AH which is probably a bit optimistic. When I was charging all those batteries, I never ran it down more than a bar or two on its gauge.
Last year, when I had a 3 week road trip, I charged almost everything g off if the GZ Yeti 1000 and kept the Yeti topped off with the Yeti topped off with the TV inverter. This included laptop, camera batteries, Gopro, and drone batteries.
I also have 12v chargers for my Canon batteries and will charge them from the T@b house batteries.
2021 T@b 320 Boondock "Mattie Ross" | 2021 T@b Nights: 239 | Total nights in a T@b 455 | 2022 Jeep Grand Cherokee L Overland | T@b owner since 2014
Jeff --Front Range of Colorado
2019 Toyota Tacoma
Asheville, NC
"Don't postpone joy!"