Hi this is Amy from the altE Store. We're
going to go over a brief overview of a typical
off grid solar electric system. This is just
a small demo, and it can scale up as your
needs require. But this will give you a good
overview of the different pieces involved.
Now I've got a lot of different electronics
and wiring involved, so, what we did is we
drew up a schematic, and you can check it
out here. And click on this link and you'll
be able to actually have it up in another window
so you can follow along at home. All right?
So, what we have are two 12V solar
panels. They are wired in parallel, so that
makes the plusses together and the minuses
together. And that keeps it at 12V. So, I've
done that within this combiner box. This is
a Midnite PV3 combiner box. And we're just
going to take a quick look inside and remove
the protective face plate. So you can see
that we have the plus and minus from solar
panel 1 coming in to, the plus goes into its
own breaker. And the minus goes into the negative
bus bar. Then the plus and minus from solar
panel 2, the plus goes into a separate breaker,
and the negative goes to the negative bus
bar. The output of the breakers are combined
with this included positive finger bus bar.
So it slides into the top of the breakers
and that combines the positives. The negative
bus bar combines the negatives. And that gives
you your parallel wiring. And so I also have
my lightning arrestor that will protect us
from any lightning strikes. And we've got
the ground going to the grounding bus bar,
the positive going to the positive bus bar,
and the negative going to the negative bus
bar. And you can see I've also got my ground
coming from my racking going into the grounding
bus bar. Now I've got the rails grounded through
this, and then I have a grounded mid-clamp
from IronRidge, which is taking that ground,
across the rail, up to the edges, the frame
of the solar panels. So that is giving me
a nice bonded connection through all of this.
I would then go off to a grounding rod, and
that would give me my nice earth ground connection.
So I'm coming out of here, in conduit. Now
because this is a portable system, I've transitioned
to "invisible conduit" here. But know that
this is going to be conduit all the way into
the house. So now let's transition into the
house. Great, so now we are inside. So we've
gone in conduit all the way into the house.
And so what we have here is it is going to
our DC Load Center. Now the DC Load Center
is really just a fancy way of saying 
breaker box. So we are going to take a look
inside our DC Load Center, we happen to be
using a Midnite Big Baby Box for this. So
again, we've got our combined negative, positive,
and ground, all coming into our DC Load Center.
We have it going into a breaker. It's coming
out of the breaker, into the PV In to the
charge controller. My negative is also coming
in, and it's actually just transitioning right
on out. It's just going in there as a nice
place to land my negative. But it's going
in and then it's coming right back out and
it's going to the negative PV In of my charge
controller. So then I've got my battery out
from the charge controller. I've got the plus
and minus going into the DC Load Center. The
plus is going to a breaker, and it's going
to be coming out, and going to my positive
bus bar. Now my positive bus bar is going
to be going to my battery. So I've got the
negative coming out of the charge controller,
going to my negative bus bar. And that negative
is also going to be going to my battery. So
I've got that going from the charge controller,
to the battery. So basically, what these bus
bars do, is these give me a nice easy way
to connect everything to the battery. So
I only have one connection to the battery,
because that's connecting in to my bus bars.
So anything I need to connect to the battery,
I can just connect to the bus bar, through
a breaker. So I have going from the positive
and the negative, I'm actually going to a
cigarette outlet. This is very common to use
for a DC connection. So if I have anything
that would plug into my cigarette outlet in
my car or an RV, I can just plug in and run
it right off the battery. I've got a fuse
in here, so I do have my over current protection,
or If I wanted to, I could have put in another
breaker and I could have gone through there.
So, I have that DC load. Now I also am going
from the positive bus bar, to another breaker,
and I'm going out to the DC input of my inverter.
I've got a 12V inverter. So I've also got
the negative coming from the negative bus
bar, which is just acting like the battery,
going to the negative of the inverter. And
I've got my ground. So, the inverter is turning
that into 120V 60Hz pure sinewave, because
I'm in North America. If I was someplace that
used 230V 50Hz, I would just use a different
inverter for that. So it's creating the AC
power for me. It's going to an AC breaker
box. For this I'm just using a Midnite Baby
Box, but if you've got a lot of AC loads,
you would have a bigger AC breaker box. So
I'm going through my breaker, going out to
an AC outlet, where I have my lights! So I
have got the light going through a breaker
to the inverter, through a breaker, to the
battery. And I've got a nice meter, Morningstar
happens to make both this inverter and the
charge controller, and they've got a meter
that I can actually connect to either one,
and it will read different settings and different
measurements based on what it's connected to.
So that is just an overview of this demo
system. We're going to do a whole bunch of
other videos based on this demo, so stay tuned.
And I hope you enjoyed our video. You can
watch more here, and check out more of us
at altEstore.com, where we are making renewable
do-able.
