Well Dave, you certainly have your ducks in a row, so to speak! With this in mind, I have a question.....Where can I find a really good PV panel which is of the modern type, as compared to the older designs of say 20 to 30 years ago, which will produce more power per day even on cloudy days? I sometimes get ready to make a purchase, look on places such as eBay and am overwhelmed at this person stating this or that one stating that about their quality panels, that I just exit the site, with hopes I will run into someone I can talk with on a one to one conversation of where to purchase a great panel at an affordable price? I have written several companies, as there aren't any around this area of Southeast Georgia that I am aware of, and besides, they aren't interested in talking to a DIY person unless they will be both selling and installing the complete system.
I first became interested in solar power when I worked in the Mojave Desert at a solar electrical generating station as it was being built, as I was a welder in the solar field who welded together and installed the 13 foot long 2-1/2" diameter 2-1/4 chrome tubing which had a bellows on both ends with a 4" glass tube connected to the other end of the bellows for expansion purposes, as there was a vacuum pulled between the chrome and the glass tubes. A heat transfer fluid would be pumped in this smaller tubing, as this 13 foot long tube would be positioned in the focal point of an array of parabolic mirrors which would generate 800 degrees, as this HTF was pumped to a heat exchanger where it produced steam to turn a turbine to produce electricity. BTW, the 13 foot sections I welded together were at a cost of between $1200 to $2000 each, or so I was told.
When I went to this site to take their TIG welding test, I was proficient at welding thinwall stainless steel tubing, as I asked the QC inspector what test I would be welding. He pointed to a test coupon on his desk, as it looked like bubble gum for a weld around it! He said that was a good weld, to which I replied, "No problem". He then said their good welds to bad rejects were around 15:1, as they would manually inspect them using a bore-scope. In the almost 4 months I was there, I had one bad weld, as this was when one of the owners of the company came into the fab shop and accidentally stepped on my TIG torch hose, cutting off the argon shielding gas to the torch head, and I came unglued! I chewed this guy out, pointed at what he had just done and explained how he had just ruined a couple of their 13 foot sections of tubes. He looked at the other co-owner and told him "We had better get out of here"! My General Foreman came over and asked what I was yelling about, so I told him, then he told me I had been yelling at the big guy, the owner, who we were working for! The owner returned the next day and apologized to me, but I did to him as well. He told me he was impressed that I cared as much as I did about making a good weld, and I was interested in doing him a good job, looking out for his best interest.
Solar Powerplant in the Mojave Desert in California from SciHD's "Machines!". (2
) - YouTube
But this plant is completely different from the PV panels, controllers and battery banks. I am interested in finding a really nice system that can be upgraded as time goes on, as I have the room to locate a battery bank area and to build a frame for holding PV panels. We hardly ever get any snow down where I live, but I've had my share of it when working in Northern Maine during the winter, as I had a couple pairs of Sorel's with extra felt liners (size 15) and the largest Carhardt's I could find (I am 6' 6" tall), as I have had to work in 50 below weather, driving 25 miles to work on icy roads thru no-man's land, all of which was beautiful to me. Our main thing these days is having to deal with power outages from these hurricanes, which I believe is gonna get worse as time goes on.
Any suggestions of where to purchase well made PV panels, connectors, MPPT controllers and the like from? By the way, thank you and the other folks for responding to this, helping an older Southern boy to have one more project for the future to keep me busy! lol I love to work and to fabricate things!