Point of No Return

25 days to go!

The rental contract for our house is signed.  Yesterday, I submitted my resignation with an exit date of July 5th.  Looks like we are actually doing this!

Our evenings are spent wading through piles of stuff.  It either gets boxed for storage, bagged for the trash, or put in the “sell it” pile.  It’s hard for me to tell, but Trish tells me we should be more or less done by the time we have to move out on July 1st.

The “WHAT HAVE WE DONE?!” panic attacks come and go, but we soldier on.

Solar wiring continued

On Sunday, I was able to bring the solar panel wires all the way in to where the solar controller is. In this photograph, they come in on the upper left, go through the upper switch, and then into the solar controller. I’ve also added a fuse for the solar controller which is in front of the larger fuse for the inverter.

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Wiring up the new solar panels

I mounted the three new solar panels on the roof a couple months ago.  Now that the controller is installed, I ran the wires from the back of the RV where the three new panels are installed, skirting the original panel at the front of the RV to get to where the controller is installed.  I used various tools to hold down the wires while the caulk dried:

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I ran the wires from the roof down into a cabinet, now I need to get them to the controller.

Solar controller and inverter wired up

Most of the wiring from the battery to the solar controller and inverter is in place now. I still have to run a ground wire from these two devices to the chassis of the RV, and bring down the wiring from the solar panels. Note the ridiculously large fuse between the solar controller and inverter. It can handle 150 amps!

The wiring from the battery to the inverter is 2 gauge, so it’s about as thick as someone’s finger and pretty tough to bend into the shapes needed for the installation. I used thick wire like this as the inverter draws about 90 amps when running the microwave oven.

We ran a quick test by running the output of the inverter into the AC cord of the RV, and we were able to run the microwave oven off battery power via the inverter. Success!

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