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Thanks. Yea I’m just going to pull the plug out and plug those in directly. The power station has a dc port. Should I buy new dc cables and just plug them into it directly? Or plug the ac cord into the battery?Formula for runtime needs to factor for:
Watt hours of the battery system
Energy needed to run the battery system itself - the screen, fans, inverter to convert dc battery power to ac power (typically a multiple of .85 represents this)
Watts from end devices
The rough formula is
(Watts hours x .85) / end device watt load
So the battery station is 1008 wh
Our efficiency is guesstimated at 85%
And your watt load is ??? 14 + 19 = 33w?
So
(1008 x .85) / 33 = Roughly 25.9 hours
do you plan to remove the mp40’s and return pump from the apex bar and plug them into the battery station directly ? That’s the only way to get full automated backup of them in a power outage
That’s what I use until I need to break out the generator. Please excuse the cable management. I need to tighten that up.If no one has mentioned it yet a UPS (uninterrupted power supply, like a big battery) could be a good option
Thanks. Yea I’m just going to pull the plug out and plug those in directly. The power station has a dc port. Should I buy new dc cables and just plug them into it directly? Or plug the ac cord into the battery?
I use a Honda 2200 during outages for reef tank, fridge etc. I really like the Gentent idea. I run the generator in the pool enclosure under an aluminum roof. The extra layer of protection from the gentent would offer some additional peace of mind.I have a gas generator and use a gentent during storms. Keeps rain and snow out of electronics and I think it was like 75mph wind. Costs about $150. Been using APC UPS for pumps which gives me a few hours to set up the generator. Also use battery air stones that come on for 24-30 hours or something when power goes off when plugged into an outlet. Whole house backup for me was quoted $16k for a 20kW so I’m passing on that.
I got tired of keeping gas on hand and stable. You could look at the same path I took for cheaper than that Anker. Sell off your current generator and buy a dual-fuel one.I currently have a generator, but as others have mentioned getting gas after a bad storm, or evening running it while still raining is an issue. Ive been looking to add this Anker system. Figure I can start with a few thousand dollars and then expand it to add panels later if I want.
I currently have a generator, but as others have mentioned getting gas after a bad storm, or evening running it while still raining is an issue. Ive been looking to add this Anker system. Figure I can start with a few thousand dollars and then expand it to add panels later if I want.
or blizzards, tornados, earthquakes, river floods, rolling black outs in summer. I'm OK where I am.Anyone suggest not living where a hurricane can get you?
Yeah, I really like mine. doesn't take long to set it up. if we are getting a big storm, sometimes I'll attach it the night before but just don't add gas. I have a Generac 8500e and will hold 9gal. keep two 5 gallon gas cans now on hand. if we have a big storm coming I just fill the car (25 gallons) and the two cans and add stabil. after a few months I just dump it in the car. too I don't store the gas too long anyway but still should be good for like a year. I also bought a siphon for the car as a back up last resort. for now I just plug the air stones into the APC UPS which when that runs out it still has oxygen going in. That's mainly for if I'm away. I only went with the UPS at first because the slightest glitch in power would knock out the Biocube32 lights and would have to re-program. But after a saw I can get a few hours attaching the pump that's my choice now for a short term outage. but yes, I recommend that gentent.I use a Honda 2200 during outages for reef tank, fridge etc. I really like the Gentent idea. I run the generator in the pool enclosure under an aluminum roof. The extra layer of protection from the gentent would offer some additional peace of mind.
or blizzards, tornados, earthquakes, river floods, rolling black outs in summer. I'm OK where I am.
Natural gas is pretty rare in Florida. I wish we had it. The HOAs here also prevent permanent outside generators in a lot of places. My HOA allows them, but not the burried propane tank I would need for it to make sense. I’d like to get solar eventually but the install costs are too high right now to make financial sense.If you have natural gas service, a whole house stand-by natural gas generator is probably your best choice. I have solar, but that is what I would choose if we got frequent power outages. The ROI on adding $15k in batteries is just not there when I could add the generator for half that and you get power indefinitely as long as natural gas service is on, rather than being dependent on whether you get enough sun and/or your solar array can recharge the batteries enough during the day.
My buddy did a DIY battery for his solar, that is really the only way a battery would be worth it to me, when you can save enough on labor to oversize the battery so you don't have to compromise.
everywhere is at best low risk of something, and low risk does not mean no risk.
Both great points. I had a several hour outage from forest trees needing to be prunedOne of the longest recent power outages here was due to a squirrel at a transformer station. Power went at at 8 am and was back on at about 3 in the afternoon. They had to get the transformer from a different location.
It can/will happen at some point.
One thing I have not seen mentioned in this thread is the ability to set charge speed. I think this is an important option to have. What you do not want to happen it for the power to go out for a couple hours then when the power comes back on you blow a breaker because in addition to all your tank equipment running you are pulling additional power to charge and overload your circuit.
My Ecoriver 2 Pro will pull 940 watts at the max charge speed, which is about half the capacity of a 15 amp circuit.