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Poor Man's Guides Presents Do it Yourself
Grid Tie Do it yourself Grid Tie. Homemade AC Grid Tie made easily! Instant Download - No Waits -------------------------------------------------------- When it comes to reducing your power bill, some people just are not interested in big bulky battery banks and battery maintenance. They want to take their windmill or solar panels and just hook them up to their grid. Even if their power meter doesn't turn backwards, they can offset the power that they use. This book shows how to take a simple AC induction motor and use it to pump power back into the grid. It is a lot easier than people think. These motors are everywhere. You can find small ones in:
I know what you are thinking. Why can't you use a regular grid tie inverter like the "Windy Boy"? Well, there are a few reasons. The first major reason is simple. Because my homemade grid tie inverter is either free or very cheap. The Windy Boy inverter is $2,000 to $3500 depending on what you get. For the other reasons, I'll have to risk boring you a moment while we look at the specs of some Windy Boy inverters:
The average small home windmill (800 - 1000 watts and 7 foot diameter blades) that hooks to a 12 volt battery bank starts charging at about 200 rpms and tops out power at about 600 rpms. That is about 15 rpms per volt. At 25 mph wind and 600 rpms, you would be producing about 40 volts at up to 50 amps or so. If you look up in the yellow section above, notice the WB1800U inverter doesn't even start working until it has 139 volts or more going into it. So, having 3 regular wind turbines running "full tilt boogie" wouldn't even start the grid feed process. Let's say you have a 48 volt wind turbine and it is 4 rpms per volt. And in 10 mph wind you normally start charging a battery bank. So you hook up a Windy Boy and see what happens. It is producing 50 volts..oops, not enough. So, you go out and buy another turbine or build one. Still not enough. So, now you are feeding the grid at 12 mph wind instead of charging a battery at 10 mph. Don't even look at the WB6000U. It takes 250 volts to start grid feeding. Which is fine if you already have a small wind farm. I know, you could use a transformer to step up the voltage, but only if you have a permanent magnet AC generator. And if you have a 3 phase PM generator (as is my modifiec car alternator) then you would need a 3 phase transformer as well. But, if you make your own inverter using a DC motor that turns an AC motor, then you can size the pulleys appropriately to start charging whenever you like. You can also add more windmills and make a new wooden pulley to go with it. Now, let's look at efficiency. I know that a DC motor coupled with an AC motor isn't that efficient. It looks like about 60% on average. But the Windy Boy and others say that their "peak efficiency" (whatever that means) is 90% or more. But, let's look at the numbers. We'll take the max power out and divide by max power in to get efficiency. The WB1800U has max input of 12 amps DC at 400 VDC. That is 4800 watts input. The max output is 1800 watts. So 1800 / 4800 is 37.5% efficient at max power. The WB6000U has 550 VDC at 25 amps DC for max input of 13,750 watts. The output is limited to 6,000 watts. That makes it 43.6% efficient at max power. But imagine 10,000 watts of input into a 15 hp DC motor that turns a 15 hp 3 phase motor (wired up according to the grid tie ebook). You would be feeding 6,000 watts into the grid at 240 VAC at 25 amps. Or you could get the exact same output by using the $3,400 Windy Boy. In this case, they would both be running at 60% efficiency. But you can also use this book to find out how to hook up an AC induction motor to a windmill to feed the grid directly without an inverter. And just use a homemade grid tie inverter to connect the solar panels to the grid. Let's look at a Sunny Boy 700. It takes 75 to 150 VDC input at max 6.8 amps DC. But I have 3 Sharp panels at 120 watts each. They put out about 21 VDC at up to 7.8 amps. So, three of them in series would be 63 volts, but I need 75 just to start charging, so 4 panels would be the minimum. And even if I had a 4th panel, the amps are too high. I could go to the next bigger Sunny Boy and that would handle 8 amps input, but it needs 125 volts DC minimum. That means I would need 6 panels minimum. So, using the Sunny Boy means I need to purchase another $2,500 worth of panels plus an expensive inverter. Or, I could use a cheap $50 DC motor from ebay.com, a free washing machine motor , and a homemade plywood pulley or pulleys to match the two up. And I can just keep my 3 solar panels and not have to spend a bunch of money. Sounds like the way to go to me. This e-book will show you the following:
Make pulleys, any size you want out of
plywood, super easy Make an automated Poor Man's Power
Point Tracker (solar or wind) Homemade grid tie inverter - solar can
grid tie with this! Use your windmill with an AC motor to
"backfeed" the grid Charging batteries using grid tie (for
emergency backup) Make a simple wind speed sensor to
engage the grid tie at the right time
This
e-book is in full color. It
is just less than 3 MB in size and you will need a PDF
viewer to view it. Upon ordering, you will be shown a
download link for instant download . |