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I am interested in you ebike solar charger setup, portable or stand alone?
Back again. I want to clean up some of the descriptons of my solar charging station/station ideas. Right now Ive made just the one charging station in the photos and it consists of a 24v 200watt solar panel array and a boost charge controller. Thats it! The boost charge controller "boosts" the output of the 24v panel array up to the 42v needed to charge the 36v battery pack Ive got connected to the controller in the photos. The controller can be easily adjusted to charge a 48v ebike battery pack from a 24v solar panel array as well. Total cost about $115($44x2 for the panels and $25 for the boost charge controller). Making the set up "pretty" will probably add a few more bucks to the project.
To make the charger that i just described portable, you could replace the two big 12v, 100watt solar panels with just one 24v, 60watt panel which I think is 20"x25". OR with one 24v, 30watt panel which is significantly smaller than the 60watt! You might even find a way to mount one of the smaller panels to your ebike so you can be charging as you ride! Of course, the smaller the panel, the slower your battery charges but even the 24v, 30watt panel would make a noticeable bump in your range on sunny days.
The last option Ill mention would be a portable solar charger that you can carry with you in a basket or strapped to your luggage rack but one youd have to stop and set up to use. Such a charger would use two 24v, 60watt solar panels OR two 24v, 30watt panels. Take the two 60watt panels, for example. If youre going to carry one 60watt panel, you may as well carry two by hinging them together so they can be opened and closed. In a closed state, two wouldnt take up any more room than one. And since you want to charge a 48v battery, and your carrying two 24v panels, you may as well connect the panels in series to make a 48v panel array and then use a "regular" solar charge controller instead of a boost CC since youd be charging a 48v battery pack with a 48v solar array. Other than that, such a solar charger would work the same way as the others Ive described but surely charge your batteries much more quickly. Im currently awaiting delivery of two 24v, 60watt panels that I ordered a couple of days ago. Im going to use them, in conjection with a renogee boost charge controller to make the last type of charger that I described: One that is portable but needs to be opened up and set out once I reach a destination. Id love to mount a solar panel permanently to my bike for constant charging but dont have any room left to do so anywhere!
Anyway, I hope you or somebody finds this stuff interesting. I surely do so if anyone out there has ideas to add or suggestions to make, Id love to hear them.