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Website review: "How to make a solar power generato...

parvez parvez discovered this in Alternative Energy 132 reviews since Oct 5, 2004
icon tagsalternative-energy, electronic-parts, solar rain.org/~philfear/how2solar.html

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Thumbs up Reviews of this website

parvez discovered 29 months ago
From the page: "How to Make a Solar Power Generator for Less Than $300 "
Carolyn10259 rated 4 weeks ago
A very helpful way to make a solar power generator.
anticompany rated 5 weeks ago
From the page: "Using parts easily available from your local stores, you can make a small solar power generator for $250 to $300. Great for power failures and life outside the power grid. Power your computer, modem, vcr, tv, cameras, lights, or DC appliances anywhere you go. Use in cabins, boats, tents, archaeological digs, or while travelling throughout the third world. Have one in the office store room in case of power failures in your highrise. "
ge-environment rated 6 weeks ago
Cool site.
hapagrrl rated 2 months ago
Very cool. I need to tell my boyfriend about this.
berecca rated 2 months ago
"Using parts easily available from your local stores, you can make a small solar power generator for $250 to $300. Great for power failures and life outside the power grid. Power your computer, modem, vcr, tv, cameras, lights, or DC appliances anywhere you go."
SuperBananna rated 2 months ago
Utter bullshit: the author claims you can use a small (read: 5-15W solar panel) to charge a dead battery in 8 hours. Car batteries are +60Amp/Hours (Ahr) which means that in order to charge them from a minimum discharge level (10.7V) to full capacity in 8 hours, you'd need to generate at least 7.5A, or about 80W-100W.
rap072589 rated 3 months ago
Solar power. Booyeah!
LongBraid rated 3 months ago
Fan-tastic! We're going to put one of these together & give it a go!
digitalartdude rated 3 months ago
Using parts easily available from your local stores, you can make a small solar power generator for $250 to $300. Great for power failures and life outside the power grid. Power your computer, modem, vcr, tv, cameras, lights, or DC appliances anywhere you go. Use in cabins, boats, tents, archaeological digs, or while travelling throughout the third world. Have one in the office store room in case of power failures in your highrise. I keep mine in my bedroom where it powers my cd player, turntable, lights, modem, laptop, and (ahem) a back massager. I run a line out the window to an 8" x 24" panel on the roof.
mcm0818 rated 3 months ago
DIY Solar battery. This is the most awesome thing I've seen in a while. It would be great for camping trips.
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