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There are constant voltage chargers and there are also
constant current chargers. The solar panel is a constant voltage charger and is thus self-limiting. It is rated at 750 milliamps at 14 volts, so it will not over charge a lead-acid battery that is also being used on a daily basis to charge laptops, cellphones and other small devices, perhaps with the use of a solid state inverter. A generator is the nicest thing, but unless they are flying a Cessna Caravan or a King Air, the weight of the generator might be better used for extra shoes, socks and sun protection. A cheap lead-acid battery can be purchased when they arrive at OSH and given away when they leave. Carriage of a lead-acid battery in the aircraft is considered hazardous material, it can easily damage the aircraft structure by concentrate weight or acid spills. Carrying a generator is also a problem once it has had fuel in the tank. Let's take a vote, is Matt an a-hole or am I an idiot? Matt, I don't think you actually read what I wrote, I mentioned both lead-acid (wet cell) and dry cell batteries. The OP was talking about a dynamic system that would be in nearly full time use keeping their portable electronic world alive. I actually think that the 3/4 amp solar cell would be hard pressed to keep the charge up in a lead-acid battery. In any case they would need to charge the battery during the day and use the charged battery over-night to charge their devices. -- James H. Macklin ATP,CFI,A&P "Matt Whiting" wrote in message ... | Jim Macklin wrote: | | Most small solar panels have low amperage and will not over | charge a wet cell battery. If they were used to directly | charge a dry cell battery, such as a C or D cell they might | over charge, but a wet cell battery with an AHr rating of 25 | amps can be charged indefinitely at a rate of 2-3 amps and | you will be using the battery to run an inverter to power | various other loads. | | Your understanding of electricity is only exceeded by your understanding | of stall dynamics. It would take in increasing voltage to maintain 2 | amps into a wet cell battery as it becomes charged. If you maintain | that rate for more than 12-13 hours, you will soon ruin the battery. | The good news is that most chargers (and certainly a PV cell) maintain a | roughly constant voltage so that the amperage tapers off as the battery | approaches full charge. | | | Matt |
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