With our older camper, I had installed 200w of solar on the roof, 200w of mobile solar, 200Ah of batter on 6-volt batteries, 700W inverter and a cell phone booster. We love to boondock so all of this was necessary.
When looking, new units were super hard to get so we go a 2019 model with hardly any use. Momentum’s come optioned in with a 4kW generator and a 30 gallon fuel tank. This was one of the draws for getting a 7.3 Tremor. At the end of trips, I’ll draw the generator down to about 1/4-tank and put that in the truck to get towing weight down on the trailer.
Even with a generator, we didn’t want to have to use the generator all of the time so on I went to adding solar.
The first step was a 270Ah lithium pack I built myself. I like to repurpose stuff, so I repurposed an old wood crate for my battery box.
I’m using 4, 270Ah Lishon cells and fed through an Overkill Solar Battery Management system. It has a nice Bluetooth app to monitor and also control the system. What’s super nice is that is has an automatic shutoff for charging when temps get below freezing. In case you don’t know, it damages lithium batteries to charge below freezing. I’m also able to monitor charge level, charging amperage/watts and discharge amperage and watts. It limits current draw and automatically shuts off at low level and high level for each individual cell.
I’m running the solar and normal 12VDC charging through a Renogy MPPT/DC-DC unit. It’s a 30A unit.
I’m also running a Victron shunt. It kind of doubles up on what the BMS does as far as monitoring but I can also monitor my generator starting battery voltage with it. It’s also very good at keeping track of cumulative power useage.
I set up my circuit to let the camper converter (thing that charges the batteries and usually runs the 12v items in the camper) to charge the lead acid battery on the tongue first. I kept the single lead acid on the tongue to start the generator with as the generator starting load is at the upper edge of what the BMS can handle.
The Renogy controller will start to charge the lithium on the DC-DC circuit when the voltage is above 13.2 (really around 13.25.13.27) so I did have to bump my converter float voltage up a bit to keep a good float charge on the lithium’s. This is due to voltage drop across the wires. The charger does this as it doesn’t want to drain the starting batteries to keep the house batteries charged. This unit can be used for camper vans/trucks as well. I can trick the converter into full boost mode by putting a load testing on the lead acid battery and dropping it to about 12.1V. This kicks in about 50A of total charging, under normal float, it maxes out at 7A.
It will also run a normal MPPT solar charge. The main downside to this unit is when charging off both DC and solar, it limits either side to 15A. I likely should have got the 50A unit from Renogy but this will do for now.
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Onto the solar I knew I needed more 400W on this camper as it’s larger and we are running more stuff off the 12V system. Also, with the mounted solar on the roof, different things like tree cover, clouds, etc can impact total Watts brought in. 12VDC power is one of my major anxiety points when boondocking, specifically in early/late season where we need it to run the heater.
As it was already summer, I opted for the easiest install first, which was mobile solar. I had used flexible 100W panels with my previous build and knew I didn’t want to do the same, so I opted for the 200W Renogy suitcase set-up. This was a wise decision as they are robust and much better quality.
I bought a heavy duty extension cord, cut the ends off and attached MC-4 (solar connectors) to one end to make a cord long enough to be able to move the panels around where I need them (in the sun). The 200W along with the MPPT make a great combination for now. I had a PWM controller on the old camper and it’s amazing how much more efficient the MPPT controller is.
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I had used a standard SAE 12V connector to connect my mobile solar cord to the camper (and solar controller) previously. After some use, the weight of the cord combined combined with the SAE plug made it difficult to get a good connection as the pins had started to widen. I looked around for a simple, waterproof connection and had settled on some sort of trailer plug. I also knew I wanted to bring my solar power in but also have a 12VDC power out as we run an ARB fridge outside (usually beer, veggies etc) for extra cooled storage.
I found a super cool, magnetic 7-pin RV plug on E-trailer and used it. It’s a pigtail and I connect my solar “extension cord” to it as well as our fridge.
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