What is your power backup plan?
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What is your power backup plan?
Mine is not all that impressive, but it works for me.
I have a few 30,800mAh battery packs, a portable "camping" 204Wh power station with a built in solar maintainer/charger, and a 1000VA UPS here at home on the modem and router for the most common short outages. I also have a rather large stock of AAA/AA batteries on hand for projects, radios, and flashlights.
That's enough to power our "portable entertainment" devices quiet a long time. Plus, we have plenty of board and card games on hand. lol
If I am desperate, I do have two power inverters I can take down and plug into my car to charge up devices.
Living in northern Wisconsin, I don't often need much in terms of AC, but for long periods with no power for heat, I have a nice kerosene heater and enough fuel on hand for several days of running. Though you really don't have to run it much, this place holds heat well, so it would likely last a couple weeks.
In all reality, the longest outage we have had here in 18 years was about 14 hours, and I slept through most of it. ?
What would I do differently? If I really needed them...
1. I would like to buy a couple nice solar panels for long-term charging of devices like phones, tablets, and portable battery packs.
2. Find the largest 5V, 9V, or 12V LCD display for running the a Pi3 or Pi4 off battery for as long as possible, purely for entertainment. The lower the power draw the better obviously.
3. Invest in a small, but good, gas generator.
What is your power backup plan?
Mine is basically my electric car with a external 1kWh power station which I connect to the DC/DC converter which charges the internal 12V battery. I can connect this up to one circuit in our apartment (additional breaker to disconnect from the grid). That's the one where the fridge is connected, plus some other sockets. Of course we would have to re-connect stuff to those other sockets. Then we also have a one-plate electrical stove for cooking, which only draws 1kW max - the power station allows up to 1.2kW. Then we have a small 500W room heater, just in case.
The car is usually charged to 60kWh which should last at least for 20 days for the fridge, lights, basic appliances and some cooking. If we have to heat a room, then it might be 5 days.
I'd like to put up solar, but because of regulations (condo building) that's not going to happen.
In Switzerland it's been well over 20 years in our region since we had a unplanned power-outage. And even the planned ones... (construction work etc) I think that's been 10 years. So I basically prepared for the unthinkable, but because of the war in Ukraine, now you never know...
What is your power backup plan?
On 6/3/2022 at 1:05 AM, AndyMt said:
The car is usually charged to 60kWh which should last at least for 20 days for the fridge, lights, basic appliances and some cooking.
While I think you might be optimistic about your run time, especially with inverter losses, I do think EV batteries are a good choice for a secondary backup. I talked with my solar guys about that, and "two way inverters" (the thing you need to do it legally here in the US) are still not commonly available. The Ford F-150 Lightning can do it, but none of the other EVs that have bi-directional charging can actually power a house, yet.
I am a little curious about the "additional breaker to disconnect from the grid"... how do you have this set up? Here that would mean yet an additional sub-panel with a transfer switch in it, along with permits and potentially a permit from the power company to operate.
What is your power backup plan?
On 6/3/2022 at 6:21 PM, TomXP411 said:
While I think you might be optimistic about your run time, especially with inverter losses
Maybe. We use approx. 6kWh during a day right now. That's excluding the car, but including the washing machine, dishwasher, home cinema, cooking, baking, home office everything else etc. I estimate that when we don't use dishwasher, washing machine, dryer etc. that we come down to half of that. We are only a 2 person household, the apartment is 100 m2, our fridge only has 60l capacity (basically everything is smaller than in the US ?).
On 6/3/2022 at 6:21 PM, TomXP411 said:
I am a little curious about the "additional breaker to disconnect from the grid"... how do you have this set up? Here that would mean yet an additional sub-panel with a transfer switch in it, along with permits and potentially a permit from the power company to operate.
We have a panel in each apartment and there is reserve space to add such things. Regulations requires that, so that you don't run out of space immediately.
I'm not a certified electrician, but my father is... so he took care of the power company and the permits, I helped with the installation. So basically I have an additional 3-phase breaker (actually it's a switch, you are right) in the panel now (everything is 3 phase in Switzerland). This means I can only power one phase from the car, but that's totally fine for an emergency situation (kitchen and living room are on the one I chose).
The connection is done via a so-called "blue plug" (usually used for RVs and boats) in the garage. The power company doesn't care that much where the power comes from, it could be a gas-generator or in my case an inverter/powerstation.
I've tried it once, to see if everything works and it's fine. It's not an automatic setup, far from that. I have to dismount the back bench of the car, to get to the DC/DC converter connectors and hook up the power station. The station then is recharged by the car, while the stations inverter provides power. I've tested connecting an inverter directly, which worked, too. But I'm worried about drawing such a high load over the DC/DC converter directly. So the power station acts as a safety buffer. Of course losses will add up, so you are right, probably it's more like 14 days, considering that. But I think that's quite cool.
If I just had some PV to recharge...
What is your power backup plan?
Some points..
* Use 48 V DC for batteries, solar panels, etc. It needs a lot thinner cables and waste a lot less power. Power loss = Cable resistance * (Current)^2
* 48 V DC is also not mandated by law to be installed by an electrician in some jurisdictions. Falls under IEC definition of ELV. NEC term "LDSV".
* 48 V DC will make conversion to 120 or 230 V AC a lot less messy.
* Put combustion power and heat machinery in a separate building and then pipe heat and electricity back to the living area. Avoids the CO issue.
* There are battery chemistries like NiFe which can be refurbished by yourself and other interesting chemistries like those based on sodium-nickel, easy access chemicals but requires 245 - 350 °C.
* Put volatile batteries like Lithium based ones inside a ceramic or concrete containment with a smoke exhaust should they fail.
* It's not rocket science to build converters from DC to AC. Power IGBT, controllers, phase adjustment and back EMF are the keys.
* Every electrical car contains enough electrical storage capacity to handle the mains power needs. And it comes with builtin charger and a Variable-Frequency-Drive. If you can control the frequency and amplitude of the later you have your (backup) mains power.
What is your power backup plan?
I've now improved my setup further, because I've found a solution for solar for our condo apartment:
6x200w solar panels on the terrace:
These are feeding into an Ecoflow Delta Max with 2kWh of battery capacity.
My office is connected to the EcoFlow and running entirely off that (including a 3d printer). In case of emergency I can switch over so I can power the entire apartment with up to 2.4kW of load. If it's getting really desparate then I can connect a 2nd inverter to my electric car, which will provide 60-70 kWh of capacity (I keep it above 80% charged all the time). As described above this would be enough to run the apartment for at least a week if we reduce our consumption. And if the sun is shining just 4 hours a day, the Ecoflow is fully charged again. Charging the car is technically possible, but would take weeks and means to restrict power use in the apartment down to almost 0.
Is this setup cheap? No!
Does it pay off anytime soon? No! (maybe after 20 years)
But it is a lot of fun to see how we produce our own energy now. We've run the apartment with this setup on sun and battery for 3 days in a row. Of course that required to not use the dish washer, dryer or washing machine. The stove we've used briefly of course, also the coffee machine, but not the oven. But in a longer emergency situation, we can wash dishes by hand, clothes should be in stock for a week or two.
Using the Ecoflow gives me all the control and data stats via WLAN I need. You can get the same for half the price if you build everything yourself, but I just wanted to have it working right away. And for the first time in 20 years, last week we did have an un-anounced power outage. This demonstrated that the setup works very well. But it also showed that indeed as expected there is no internet when there is no power. Mobile networks were fine though.
What is your power backup plan?
On 10/22/2022 at 11:47 AM, AndyMt said:
Does it pay off anytime soon? No! (maybe after 20 years)
Better to see it as an insurance policy. They have to be payed in advance not after the "house has burned down" and may never "pay out" if everything is alright. Just having light to take care of medical emergencies, cooking after sunset, finding the toilet seat, being able to wash hands etc improves circumstances a lot. It can also power communication and entertainment. All small power loads which makes a huge difference for the energy expended.
Expect mobile networks to work for a few hours at most. Their design criteria is to provide power long enough for a service technician to visit and fix the power problem. If it's really important a mobile diesel-generator will be put in place by the cell operator or the state. If you want to be ensured communication HAM is the answer.
Btw, are those solar panels secured in case of windy conditions?
What is your power backup plan?
On 10/23/2022 at 1:56 AM, neutrino said:
Btw, are those solar panels secured in case of windy conditions?
Yes - they are held in place with 3mm thick steel wires attached to the sockets of the hand rail.
On 10/23/2022 at 1:56 AM, neutrino said:
Better to see it as an insurance policy
Indeed, that's how I see it, too. For heating, I'm not too worried as the apartment was built to passive house standards. I just need to make sure the ventilation can run for an hour, to exchange the air. Even with no clear sky and sunshine these houses heat up by themselves because they are so well insulated. And we get well below freezing temperatures here in Switzerland during Winter.