1 Hack To Eliminate Your A/C Power Bill This Summer!

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  • čas přidán 1. 06. 2024
  • In this video, we show you how to transform your standard air conditioner into a solar-powered air conditioner with ease! With a few simple modifications and some basic DIY skills, you can harness the power of the sun to keep your home cool and reduce your energy bills. We'll guide you step-by-step through the entire process!
    Discover how to integrate solar panels, and a micro-inverter, to convert your traditional AC unit into a green, money saving, eco-friendly cooling solution. Join us as we explore the benefits of solar-powered air conditioning, from saving money to even eliminating your HVAC power bill, to reducing your carbon footprint. Don't miss out on this innovative and cost-effective project that will keep you cool all summer long!
    Buy an Enphase iQ8+ microinverter like you saw on this video: enphase.com/store/microinvert...
    Buy the Bouge RV 200W solar panels like you saw in this video: amzn.to/3V0VALW
    Free Shipping and Generally NO Sales Tax! Buy the best deals on new high quality solar panels: shrsl.com/4j8e9
    Buy the multi-meter you saw me use in this video: amzn.to/44GAupB
    Buy Wago wire connectors: amzn.to/3ULqneF
    Watch the installation video about the Micro-Air EasyStart: • Save Lots of $$$! Micr...
    Buy a Micro-Air EasyStart for your own A/C:
    Buy the ASY-368-X48-BLUE (the easy start I used in this video) for 31K - 48K BTUs A/C units: amzn.to/3jKAJsO
    Buy the ASY-368-X72-BLUE for 49K - 72K BTUs A/C units: amzn.to/37jljcM
    Chapters:
    0:00 IT WORKS!
    0:22 Can I turn my A/C into a solar powered A/C?
    2:28 What do you need to convert you’re A/C to a solar power?
    3:24 Connecting everything!
    5:33 Turning on and testing!
    9:28 Thoughts and feedback
    #solar
    #diy
    #offgrid
    #hvac
    #theresatrickforthat
    Affiliate Disclosure
    As an Amazon associate I earn from qualifying purchases at no cost to you! Thanks for your support!
    Disclaimer: Due to factors beyond the control of There’s a Trick for That, I cannot guarantee against improper use or unauthorized modifications of this information. There’s a Trick for That assumes no liability for property damage or injury incurred as a result of any of the information contained in this video. Use this information at your own risk. There’s a Trick for That recommends safe practices when working on machines and or with tools seen or implied in this video. Due to factors beyond the control of There’s a Trick for That, no information contained in this video shall create any expressed or implied warranty or guarantee of any particular result. Any injury, damage, or loss that may result from improper use of these tools, equipment, or from the information contained in this video is the sole responsibility of the user and not There’s a Trick for That.
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Komentáře • 490

  • @theresatrickforthat
    @theresatrickforthat  Před 15 dny +11

    Buy an Enphase iQ8+ microinverter like you saw on this video: enphase.com/store/microinverters/iq8-series/iq8plus-microinverter
    Buy the Bouge RV 200W solar panels like you saw in this video: amzn.to/3V0VALW
    Free Shipping and Generally NO Sales Tax! Buy the best deals on new high quality solar panels: shrsl.com/4j8e9
    Buy the multi-meter you saw me use in this video: amzn.to/44GAupB
    Buy Wago wire connectors: amzn.to/3ULqneF
    Watch the installation video about the Micro-Air EasyStart: czcams.com/video/JT9Sw57CZXE/video.html
    Buy a Micro-Air EasyStart for your own A/C:
    Buy the ASY-368-X48-BLUE (the easy start I used in this video) for 31K - 48K BTUs A/C units: amzn.to/3jKAJsO
    Buy the ASY-368-X72-BLUE for 49K - 72K BTUs A/C units: amzn.to/37jljcM
    Affiliate Disclosure
    As an Amazon associate I earn from qualifying purchases at no cost to you! Thanks for your support!

    • @fullyelectric
      @fullyelectric Před 11 dny +1

      So this micro inverter output is 240v split phase (two hot legs L1/L2 ?) or just one hot leg with 240v ? If its two hot legs does this means from ground or neutral you’ll see 120v off each hot leg? I mainly use NEP micro inverter, seems like it maybe the same as this one?

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 11 dny +2

      @@fullyelectricIt’s split phase. Two hots each at 120V 180 degrees out of phase with each other just like the utility power. Thanks for watching!

    • @fullyelectric
      @fullyelectric Před 11 dny

      @@theresatrickforthat very good and technically since you house will always have something pulling in well over 300-400w all the time you can offset even more just connection it to your panel, the NEP works well too, almost identical products except the NEP has like a heatsink built on the case, BTE does Enphase make any micro inverter over 400w?

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 11 dny +2

      @@fullyelectricYeah, I’ve seen those NEP ones around. Not sure all the sizes Enphase has. Just happened to have an extra one kicking around and started having some fun with it. :)

    • @ianbelletti6241
      @ianbelletti6241 Před dnem

      I looked at the specs. The IQ8+ is rated 240v 290VA out continuous. That's an output of 1.2A. You're already maxing out the output. If you want more solar power then you'll need more inverters or an inverter with a higher output rating. Also, for a permanent installation you'll want to fuse the lines and add disconnects when you feed the compressor. You could also add batteries that are charged by the solar power during the day but are used to offset the power at night.

  • @mikepeters2852
    @mikepeters2852 Před 10 dny +284

    I am a retired electrical engineer, and what you are doing is technically correct. You are adding a grid-tie inverter to the circuit to CONTRIBUTE to the power being drawn by the AC unit. You will never come close to power draw that the AC unit needs, and its only inserted when its running, there is no chance you would ever inadvertently export to the grid. Since the micro-inverters are designed to require a grid to sync with before they will export power (anti-islanding) there is no safety concern. Also no way the utility will ever know.. Before I became legitimately connected to the grid, I made a far more sophisticated system consisting of current sensors and outputs from my thermostats to control how many panels were connected to my inverter depending on the load. That way i didn't have to completely disconnect the grid until the total house load was less then what a single panel produced. Super nerd project. I ran it like that for over 2 years until the official connection was made, and now I'm legal! Endphase inverters want to see a gateway, so it would be better to use the cheap Chinese micro-inverters that don't spend time looking for a gateway. Also, switching the DC side will get the power to the AC unit with a shorter delay, but you would have to control an external relay to do so. Make sure you provide a disconnect of some sort so you don't confuse the poor AC tech who is trying to fix your AC unit when it fails in the hottest part of summer! BTW. The best thing you ever did, was install the soft start unit to the AC. They are pricey, but worth it. A final word of advice: Just because you CAN do something, it doesn't necessarily mean you SHOULD do it. You have to be the judge. I tend to live on the edge myself, it keeps things interesting.

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 10 dny +26

      Hey! Sincere thanks for your thoughts and wisdom! Probably the most valuable comment so far! Thanks for taking the time to write it! Sounds like you had a pretty sweet setup. Thanks for watching and commenting!

    • @imnguyen6658
      @imnguyen6658 Před 8 dny +5

      Great info. So OP has one panel with one inverter, would iir be safe to add a combiner box to parallel more panels?

    • @ToolDeals
      @ToolDeals Před 5 dny +5

      Beautiful comment! Us CZcamsrs appreciate the knowledge, experience, and encouragement! I'm considering this, but with batteries.

    • @mxcollin95
      @mxcollin95 Před 4 dny +2

      Thank you for your input. As just a regular home owner, it’s nice to hear from someone knowledgeable in the field to further my understanding of the elements involved. To me this seems likes a pretty ingenious idea in theory.

    • @mannydelrio1
      @mannydelrio1 Před 3 dny +3

      Awesome comment , very educational , you should create a video explaining to those of us that dont know much.

  • @thomasmills1150
    @thomasmills1150 Před 14 dny +107

    Hold on a minute..... I'm mesmerized by how good your lawn looks....

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 13 dny +3

      Haha! Thank you! That’s another project of mine! Got a video on that as well! czcams.com/video/zSvJwO9IJTE/video.htmlsi=gYDD_jhGNjFw0yXS Thanks for watching!

    • @josephmiller6866
      @josephmiller6866 Před 11 dny +1

      Lol me too lol😂

    • @jkmarshall3553
      @jkmarshall3553 Před 10 dny

      Scott's Turf Builder!!

    • @johnmanning7620
      @johnmanning7620 Před 8 dny

      I was thinking that too

    • @xdsone
      @xdsone Před 6 dny

      Is that Bermuda?

  • @AlekseyK86
    @AlekseyK86 Před 9 dny +41

    I have same setup with 10 panels running my pool pump for free for like 4hr if the sun is out, had the setup for 5year now and it sure helps to offset power consumption.

  • @racinjason68
    @racinjason68 Před 9 dny +43

    People getting hung up on thinking the 2 panels are supplying all the power. They are not! They are just reducing what the grid has to supply. No different than if the panels were tied to the breaker box and every time the ac kicked on he turned on the solar breaker.
    Wattage is wattage. If your panels produce 400w then your overall grid usage will go down 400w.
    Nice way showing initial draw and then the supplied amperage and overall amp draw after the micro inverter kicked in. 👍🏻👍🏻
    Before I installed my full array, I did this same thing to see if it would work. It did and my home energy monitor helped prove it as I could see my overall grid usage drop when the panels were producing. The electric company had no idea for months.

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 8 dny +8

      Haha! Yep! They seem to have a hard time wrapping their heads around the concept. Thanks for the kind comment and for watching!

    • @TheBear470
      @TheBear470 Před 6 dny +11

      Maybe people are thinking the panels are supplying all the power because of the clickbait title. I mean after all, it does say "Eliminate your AC power bill"

    • @CryptoNut82
      @CryptoNut82 Před 6 dny +4

      @@TheBear470well you just add enough panels and it can eliminate it, just don’t add more than you need

    • @Branx86
      @Branx86 Před 2 dny

      Yes you correct but if there is a smart meter involved it will show more power used Sneaky electric company has some built in the meter to watch the Hz

    • @racinjason68
      @racinjason68 Před 2 dny +1

      @@Branx86I have solar and worked with the electric company when they setup my meter. They had no idea I had solar hooked up for the previous 2 months, I was supplementing power to see how much it would produce and a way to reduce usage without the extra bi-directional meter fee. Producing exactly what I used or up to double my usage would save me money. Producing over double my usage cost me more. After the couple of months I had them out to inspect my setup and reprogram my meter to be bidirectional. I found in my situation it was more beneficial to just let my panels work vs trying to supplement and track output and usage.

  • @Bluebark64FIS
    @Bluebark64FIS Před 3 dny +7

    I did a setup like this for my house. Six industrial solar pnl using a 2x3 setup and three inverters I picked up from ebay. Just plugged the whole thing into a 30a socket I have on the out side for a gen. Knocked about a $100+- a month off my bill. On a good clear day it would crank out 1kwh on average.

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 3 dny +1

      Sweetness! Thanks for watching!

    • @skeon67
      @skeon67 Před 2 dny +1

      How much money do you have in your setup if you don't mind me asking?

    • @Bluebark64FIS
      @Bluebark64FIS Před 2 dny +5

      @@skeon67 The Solaria panels (230W) were a $100ea. used. The inverters were $130ea. new. The wiring/cables, meter and other odds and ends like water proof connectors and such were another couple hundred. I got lucky with the solar panels. Very high end...each panel was covered with a glass panel that had a convex lens over each cell. Captured light from almost any angle.

    • @skeon67
      @skeon67 Před 2 dny

      thanks@@Bluebark64FIS

    • @ssoffshore5111
      @ssoffshore5111 Před 2 dny

      I'm assuming this 30A socket is tied directly into your panel and will actually backfeed to the grid if there's not enough load being used to consume all the solar power generated?

  • @captainobvious9188
    @captainobvious9188 Před 8 dny +13

    I've been doing hacks like this for a decade. The problem with most grid-tie inverters is that they follow the legal mandate of waiting 5 minutes before exporting power, so unless you are in a particularly hot climate, that misses most of the AC cycle. There are lots of options to get around that, but the point of this video is that it is the cheapest way to do this.

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 8 dny +3

      You’re exactly right! Thanks for watching!

    • @OriginalTodzilla
      @OriginalTodzilla Před 7 hodinami

      Captain Obvious, do you know what work-arounds for the 5 minute delay are? Are there inverters that are configurable? I was wondering if UK or AU inverters didn't have that requirement.

  • @nathanhatcher7096
    @nathanhatcher7096 Před dnem +2

    Nice! yes Elec current made by the solar thur micro inverters will flow just like water it going to flow in the least resist way so yes what power it made is only going to flow into the nearest appliance long before it will ever flo out into the main grid. Besude the micro inverters need to see power before they will turn on! And no power they turn on off, to safely keep from back feeding a grid line. Thanks for sharing

  • @soltribeprojects2055
    @soltribeprojects2055 Před 3 dny +2

    I recently purchased my home and am eager to try out the solar panel system. I am also considering adding a few batteries to assist with energy storage during the night.
    I believe that utilizing solar energy for cooling the house is an innovative and eco-friendly approach, just amazing 👏.

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 3 dny +1

      Congrats on your home purchase! Glad you enjoyed the video! Thanks for watching!

  • @fixanythingdiy
    @fixanythingdiy Před 3 dny +1

    Well Done! I did something similar with my pool pump.

  • @hwoodist
    @hwoodist Před 8 dny +2

    Thank you for the video. I learned something new about inverters.

  • @neilstern7108
    @neilstern7108 Před 7 dny +4

    Im sort of doing it the other way around. I call it mt emergency system. I do as much as i can to do well tv microwave even will run 600w heater. But is mostly for hurricane season. To offset gas gen. This idea of yours is amazing.

  • @ivanribadeneira308
    @ivanribadeneira308 Před 10 dny +13

    If this is drawing 5 to 10 amps look into victron multiplus. Those units are design to sync solar with grid in one unit. RV people do this all the time.

    • @Post_Oak_
      @Post_Oak_ Před 10 dny +2

      That’s like 8x the price of this

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 10 dny +6

      I'm sure it would work too! The idea behind what I'm showing here is you can start small and grow over time all while offsetting the power consumed sooner rather than later once budget allows for a large inverter. Thanks for watching!

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 10 dny

      Yep! You're exactly right! Thanks for watching!

  • @kastation
    @kastation Před 12 dny +11

    This is an awesome idea. if you can do more video like these, that would help a lot of people to save money.

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 12 dny +1

      Thank you! I’ve certainly got more fun ideas for the future so be sure you’re subscribed so you don’t miss them! Thanks for watching and commenting!

  • @blainecelestaine4543
    @blainecelestaine4543 Před 9 dny +2

    Simply Genius

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 9 dny

      Thank you! Thanks for watching!

    • @blainecelestaine4543
      @blainecelestaine4543 Před 9 dny +1

      @@theresatrickforthat no seriously this is a absolute game changer to lowering electric bills and reducing emissions. Bring a kit to market that makes it easy to install ( inverters, shut off , connection s, and instructions. Bcuz it's coming thru somebody anyway,,from your idea.. thx again

  • @markmcdowell6878
    @markmcdowell6878 Před 4 dny

    GREAT JOB!!!! KEEP ON ADDING ON !!!

  • @donaldrogers1182
    @donaldrogers1182 Před 7 dny +1

    This is awesome! Show more!

  • @williampisano7573
    @williampisano7573 Před 7 dny +1

    Great idea 💡

  • @lulu_your_girl
    @lulu_your_girl Před 4 dny

    Awesome thanks for sharing, would love to see your ideas in reference to pool.

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 4 dny

      Cool! I think that would be a good video to make as well! Thanks for watching!

  • @cedricferrell8577
    @cedricferrell8577 Před 4 dny

    Great job

  • @andys5203
    @andys5203 Před 10 dny +3

    I will not say eliminate but definitely offset. Good job 😊

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 10 dny

      Offset is a great word! Thanks for watching!

    • @andys5203
      @andys5203 Před 9 dny +1

      I was wondering about the life span of the micro inverter cycling on & off when the ac is operational. I have a pool pump, which I will be doing the same set up, but that stays on for 8 hrs.

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 9 dny

      @@andys5203 Time will tell on the longevity I guess. Glad to hear you’re going to be using it with the pool pump! Great solution for that!

    • @STho205
      @STho205 Před 4 dny

      The HVAC industry could eliminate grid power with self contained package minisplit AC units....they already have soft start circuitry and draw much less power...plus as zone ACs they could be programmed to automatically ration Air Conditioning to priority and low priority zones when solar power drops.
      The AC would pull grid power only when insufficient solar hours exist.
      If the collective world was really worried about what they said they are, then that would have been the first mandated upgrade to heavy appliances in the 1980s and 90s.
      As it is, the design described above would triple ir quadruple the cost of a minisplit install...which would require years of payback...which may not be covered by the lifecycle of the unit.

  • @johnmal5975
    @johnmal5975 Před 14 dny +2

    That's beyond amazing! Wow I am impressed. I would also add the dryer as well.

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 14 dny

      Thanks! It’s a very cool option! The dryer is a good idea! Thanks for watching and commenting!

    • @user-dr2pg8fk2i
      @user-dr2pg8fk2i Před 13 dny +1

      This has been a thing for over a decade. And it's nothing but a pile of code violations.

  • @mannydelrio1
    @mannydelrio1 Před 3 dny +3

    Can you do a video on the connections in more detail , awesome video !!

  • @jolomj
    @jolomj Před 8 dny +1

    more vids like this please

  • @DCJNewsMedia
    @DCJNewsMedia Před 6 dny +1

    Ty

  • @chrisfrancis8446
    @chrisfrancis8446 Před 4 dny

    Awesome I would like to learn more about this

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 4 dny

      Great! Stay tuned, got a few good ideas in mind to come related to this, plus I'm going to scale my system for the AC coming up, so I'll provide further details then too! Thanks for watching!

  • @OriginalTodzilla
    @OriginalTodzilla Před 7 hodinami +1

    This is exactly what I was looking for!!! Thanks!!! My only concern is these inverters have that "5 minute saftey" delay. So technically everytime the AC kicks on you lose 5 minutes of free solar. Does anyone know of these micro inverters are configurable to be less than that? Or are there ones that are?

    • @ScottPlude
      @ScottPlude Před 5 hodinami +1

      I don't understand why the 5 minute delay either. My A/C only runs about ten minutes each cycle so I am losing half my power output. I wonder if that can be explained or changed. I would think a second or two would be fine with modern electronics.

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 2 hodinami

      One of life's mysteries I guess! Thanks for watching!

  • @steve6631
    @steve6631 Před 7 dny +1

    Great video

  • @Mike-01234
    @Mike-01234 Před 5 dny

    That is a good idea didn't think about that my utility is very sensitive to back feeding. I didn't expect 1 amp I was thinking you might get .25 of an amp at best with two panels. Hoymiles makes a microinverter can connect 4 panels to one inverter up to 2000W each inverter.

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 5 dny

      Glad you enjoyed the video! Thanks for sharing your thoughts and thanks for watching!

  • @lalopena36
    @lalopena36 Před 5 dny +1

    I do the same thing, but for the washer and dryer. Washer and dryer connected to a power strip that's connected to a kill-o-watt meter that's connected to a y&h 1300w grid tie inverter that's connected to two in parallel 535 watt solar panels. I still back feed to the grid, but what the washer and dryer consume is more than what I back feed into the grid so I'm ok with that.

  • @douglasspores4651
    @douglasspores4651 Před dnem

    How long do the Enphase micro inverters look for a gateway before producing power? I am wondering if the APSystems inverter may be a better choice.

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před dnem

      It takes about 5 minutes for it to start producing power after it sees grid power. Thanks for watching!

  • @FJRyder
    @FJRyder Před 11 dny +1

    I have 4 of the older IQ7's. I was thinking about getting a 12dc to 220vac inverter to simulate grid power. And see if I could make a off grid, grid. Don't know what for, other than just seeing if it can be done.

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 10 dny

      Worth a try I suppose! Thanks for watching!

    • @beforebefore
      @beforebefore Před 6 dny

      The challenge with this is that the inverters will "push" their output higher until the inverter is putting out as much power as possible. This will feed back into the 12v to 220v inverter, and cause it to either shut off, or burn up. The "mains source" needs to be a lot more powerful than the grid tie inverter(s)... by at least several times. IOW, if you want to use 1000 Watts of solar through grief tie inverters, your main source of "artificial grid" needs to be at least 3-5 times as much power. In a case like this, those IQ8 inverters can actually form their own micro-grid on their own... but you need their other equipment to control the IQ8 inverters, as this is a special mode that has very strict requirements.
      ... or just buy a Hybrid Solar Inverter - that can do both Grid-Tie (grid interactive), or off-grid operation as needed... though that usually requires a storage battery to fill-in the gaps when cloud cover would cause a loss-of-solar black-out.

  • @aunttriciaattic
    @aunttriciaattic Před 10 dny +3

    This is totally amazing. Now if only I could do this to a window unit.Wait, do you think it will work with a window unit?

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 10 dny +6

      Thanks! It won’t work with a window unit very well unless your window unit is 240V or you find a 120V micro inverter. But then you’ll have to wire in some kind of relay that turns on and off with the window unit compressor to avoid back feeding the grid…seems like to much trouble and hassle. Sorry about that! Maybe consider getting a solar power station, plugging your window ac into that and then connecting solar to the power station. Would probably be more useful and an easier solution for a window unit. You might consider the Anker Solix C1000. Here’s a link to my review and testing of that unit. I think it’s even on sale for Memorial Day. czcams.com/video/Zdl3syXDUP8/video.htmlsi=GYXwEd0gqnx8fORw
      Thanks for watching!

    • @fauxque5057
      @fauxque5057 Před 5 dny +2

      You can buy a 24,000 btu mini split from Signature Solar for $1899. It has a built in MPPT inverter built in and you can connect solar panels direct to the AC unit. But some used solar panels locally, or from San tan Solar to cut costs and you're good to go. It will run 100% from solar and from the grid on cloudy days and at night.
      If you don't need 24,000BTU they have a 12,000BTU unit for $1299.
      They also sell complete setups with solar panels

  • @mntmike67
    @mntmike67 Před 6 dny

    Are there any phase synchronization issues or dose the inverter handle Phase-Locked Loop (PLL) ?

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 6 dny

      The inverter handles all of that and you don't have to worry about it. Thanks for watching!

  • @azycray4801
    @azycray4801 Před 10 dny

    Please give spec's for the A/C demand and the two panels output, because my back of the envelope figures fall far short of running that whole house A/C

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 10 dny +4

      Did you watch the entire video? I show amp draws and everything for the A/C unit! Also, see if you can find the part in the video where I talk about my two panels and single micro inverter not being sufficient for my A/C unit. Thanks for watching!

  • @chipperfluffy
    @chipperfluffy Před 3 dny

    That is genius

  • @imnguyen6658
    @imnguyen6658 Před 8 dny

    Awesome hack. Do you think other models such as the IQ7 will work as well?

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 8 dny +1

      Thank you! I would imagine earlier versions of the Enphase inverters would work…but I can’t personally say since I’ve only tested with the iq8+ as you saw in the video. Thanks for watching!

  • @davidlackey4873
    @davidlackey4873 Před 8 dny

    i'm a happy bourge rv customer...bought solar ref/freezer 4yrs ago and it's still going strong...take ice cream with me when i go fishing.

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 8 dny

      Sweet! That’s the way to do it! I agree Bouge RV is awesome. Thanks for watching!

  • @NBC_NCO
    @NBC_NCO Před 5 dny

    My ac unit on the inside of my house plugs into a 110/120 outlet .
    If I was going to do that.
    I would install a couple of deep cycle batteries outside and a power inverter somewhere near my AC unit and a solar panel to recharge the batteries.
    Looks like a good setup to me.

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 5 dny +1

      Adding batteries and an off grid inverter so you could harvest solar power from the panels even if the AC was off would be the ideal solution for sure! This proof of concept at least lets us poor people start getting some solar benefits for much cheaper while saving for batteries and a bigger inverter. Thanks for watching!

    • @NBC_NCO
      @NBC_NCO Před 5 dny

      @@theresatrickforthat you're welcome.

  • @db0nn3r
    @db0nn3r Před 3 dny

    Awesome. How could you build this system out to supply power to the entire home but not back feed? Offsetting energy usage with a solar array but using no more than what is called for? Is there a “limit switch” of sorts for solar?

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 3 dny

      Probably the best way would be to get an all in one inverter with batteries, and then let the inverter do the switching between solar and battery power and grid power. Thanks for watching!

    • @ssoffshore5111
      @ssoffshore5111 Před 2 dny +1

      @@theresatrickforthat Unless I'm missing something, that inverter, even with batteries, would have to have some type of internal limiter feature with current sensor(s) to keep it from back-feeding the grid. Much like Sol Ark's inverters have.

  • @delvirodriguez2182
    @delvirodriguez2182 Před 9 dny +2

    How do you connect the wires coming from the inverter to the condenser unit ? in parallel to the 240v coming from the grid?

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 9 dny +6

      Yep! It connects in parallel. But on the load side of the contactor so the contactor controls when the inverter sees the grid and turns the inverter on when the AC is on and then turns the inverter off when the AC turns off. Thanks for watching!

    • @delvirodriguez2182
      @delvirodriguez2182 Před 9 dny +1

      Thank you for answering my question!!!

  • @aphilly2158
    @aphilly2158 Před dnem

    Do you think it can run off batter also if you set it up when there is no sun

  • @GeoFry3
    @GeoFry3 Před dnem

    Nice.
    I'm surprised this sort of setup is not more common as a way of making the AC "more efficient."

  • @ronethridge9875
    @ronethridge9875 Před 13 dny +2

    😊 Super 😊 great 😊 thanks 😊 much 😊😊😊

  • @RM-yn1kz
    @RM-yn1kz Před 6 dny +1

    Good morning Sir. I have a 115 volts mini split. Can I offset the power on that. I see you using 220 volts. I would appreciate your feedback.

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 6 dny

      You can't use the same setup I show in this video with a 115V mini-split. And all of the other 120V micro inverters on the market seem gimmicky or expensive. So if I were you, I would just get a solar power station, plug the mini split into that, connect solar and away you go! Here's a video I made earlier this year testing the run time of my 115V mini split on an EcoFlow Delta 2 Max in heat pump mode. Note, I do not have any solar connected...but if you did, that would help offset some of the mini-split consumption all the way up to fully offsetting it with enough solar. czcams.com/video/eLvLTR6wPkc/video.html Thanks for watching!

    • @RM-yn1kz
      @RM-yn1kz Před 6 dny

      @@theresatrickforthat thanks

  • @jimday9430
    @jimday9430 Před 4 dny

    Does the inverter only allow solar power to flow when an amperage is drawn from the grid or will it feed the grid when it just "sees" 240? I want to use this on my pool pump but it is a variable speed hooked up to a Pentair easy touch 8 and apparently the line and loads must be hooked up to the line side of the line side of the relay. No current flowing until the relay kicks on. I know that sounds strange but that is the way it is wired.

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 4 dny

      I'm unfamiliar with your setup...but these inverters just need to "see" the grid to produce power. They do not need to see power being drawn in order to produce power. Thanks for watching!

  • @anthonyglaser929
    @anthonyglaser929 Před 13 dny +1

    Good video, certain some food for thought. Those micro inverters cost like $175.00 each, where as the regular inverters are around $200.00 but will handle 10 times the power. I've never seen a big inverter with m4 connectors. I wonder would it be possible to string a bunch of panels directly to one big inverter without going through a charge controller?

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 13 dny +1

      It would be interesting to see what the options are! They just need to have grid interactive features like these micro inverters do, otherwise you’re stuck building an off grid system that requires some kind of battery. Anyway, I love the ideas and thoughts! Thanks for watching!

  • @xdsone
    @xdsone Před 6 dny +1

    I wonder if one of those single 2000w grid tie solar inverters would work in this setup?

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 6 dny

      I'm sure they would! They're just more expensive in one bulk chunk as opposed to slowing adding more panels and micro inverters as money allows. Thanks for watching!

  • @TheRealoldcar
    @TheRealoldcar Před 10 dny +4

    This works and using emphases are best. Recommend adding FRN fuse pairs just off the contactor and a ground wire to the panel frame to the condenser frame ground.

  • @caseymiklosh5537
    @caseymiklosh5537 Před 4 dny

    I’m in Florida, in reality how much would this assist my electric bill? I have a brand new 4 ton unit in my house and with the current weather it’s running often. Every little bit will help! Also looking at the easy start to assist with hurricane season.

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 4 dny

      You can scale this concept as big as you need to fully eliminate the power you A/C unit uses, then apply the power bill savings to getting battery backup so then you'll be able to use the solar panels all the time including when the AC is off and have the battery and solar to assist you during hurricane season. That's at least what I would do! Thanks for watching!

  • @robertderrick5787
    @robertderrick5787 Před 2 dny

    So does that mean you're running 48 volts into your compressor windings continuously all the time? So if that's the case I think you need another relay . Are the compressors going to heat up

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 2 dny +1

      Thankfully, no. When the AC shuts off the micro inverter can't see the grid anymore and it completely shuts the power down from the panels. Thanks for watching!

  • @richarddeleon9284
    @richarddeleon9284 Před 6 dny +1

    There are string inverters that can do what you want in a more efficient ways. You can control via computer if the inverter will sell excess energy or to grid or not.
    These are the newer hybrid inverters. Of course you will need batteries to store energy for the off times..

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 6 dny

      That would be the ultimate setup for sure! This way I showed is a way to get up and going with solar and saving money with it faster and with a smaller system while you’re saving for the ultimate setup like you mentioned. Thanks for watching!

  • @connieleehaynes914
    @connieleehaynes914 Před 5 dny

    CAN YOU SEND US ELECTRICAL SCHEMATICFOR THE HOOKUP OF YOUR IQ 8+ micro invertor and soft start unit. thanks Connie

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 5 dny

      I don’t have a schematic. But the two hot wires from the IQ8+ just connect on the load side of the A/C contactor like you saw in the video, the ground wire of course goes to ground. MicroAir EasyStart has its own schematics for different A/C types. Thanks for watching!

  • @a-iu9zO
    @a-iu9zO Před dnem

    For those less sure of what they are doing, there's a kit (EGR4?) that lets you control a heat pump from off-grid solar.

  • @coachgeo
    @coachgeo Před 8 dny

    This might could be a great partner to a regular solar system with batteries. (Less panels needed, less batteries, less stress on all of it too) On bright sunny days your battery charging system would end up mostly dedicated to charging batts for your night time use, cause the "partnered" reduction of grid power use, solar set up would be handeling the day time heavy draw stuff.
    Set it up wisely so in a SHTF / you loose grid power, You could easily unwire the panels from the grid side and add them to your battery side....

  • @dannyl6507
    @dannyl6507 Před 10 dny +1

    This is pretty cool! I didnt see you test the voltage after you connected inverter to the contactor while the disconnect is still unplugged. When the contactor is off, the microinverter should not energize the compressor but could the capacitor have enough current to "trick" the microinverter making the system live even though the contactor is off? Also the solar energy from the panels is wasted when off, so having a battery or some other way to use the energy would be good to get more use out of the panels.

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 10 dny +5

      Maybe it's possible that capacitor could fool the inverter for a minute...but it takes a few minutes of the grid being present before the inverter starts producing, so I don't think we need to worry about that. And yes, it would be best to not only be producing power when the A/C is on. But solar panels are cheap, batteries are not. So if you could run your A/C for "free" even though you're leaving power on the table, that might be enough for some people. Or start by just offsetting your A/C power bill and apply your savings to the cost of a battery down the road. Thank for watching!

    • @jm-um1tx
      @jm-um1tx Před 2 dny +1

      @@theresatrickforthat The best part is you already have a virtual battery. It's your house.
      If you run your AC during the middle of the day when you're at work instead of shutting it off because you're not home and cool all the rooms down really well, then keep the house buttoned up until early morning when it's cool outside, you don't need to have batteries to run the AC at night.

    • @ssoffshore5111
      @ssoffshore5111 Před 2 dny +1

      @@jm-um1tx Agreed, although that really only makes sense to do it that way if you have enough solar to come close to zeroing out the consumption from the grid.
      Also, keep in mind if there's a little bit of excess solar energy being produced in excess of what the AC is consuming, it would likely be consumed by the base load from the rest of the house (refrigerator, wall warts, fans, lights, etc) before it got pushed back to the grid. Most houses always seem to use at least a couple of hundred watts at all times, obviously that varies by household, but generally this is the case.

    • @jm-um1tx
      @jm-um1tx Před 2 dny

      @@ssoffshore5111 Yep, and as you say, buy more panels, they're cheaper than batteries.

  • @diytwoincollege7079
    @diytwoincollege7079 Před 5 dny

    I have a fish tank with lots of accessories. That might be a good idea to power it with the sun.

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 5 dny

      Sounds like a fun DIY project! Best of luck to you! Thanks for watching!

  • @nicholassanders527
    @nicholassanders527 Před 3 dny

    Cool!

  • @conrusco
    @conrusco Před dnem

    How much solar to actually start and run with the soft start on the unit ?

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před dnem

      In my case, I’m just worried about the running amps. The AC can pull the extra starting amps for a spit second from the grid that it needs. I would need about 5 of these micro inverters with solar panels like I showed in the video to 100% run the unit on solar power. I plan to do that as money allows. Thanks for watching!

  • @JoeSmith-nz2ju
    @JoeSmith-nz2ju Před 8 dny +1

    getting a soft start for the AC would help....

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 8 dny +4

      Might want to watch the entire video and see if you can spot something that resembles a soft start! Thanks for watching!

  • @frank0720i
    @frank0720i Před 7 dny

    I really like this idea

  • @conrad6301
    @conrad6301 Před 7 dny +1

    U think this same setup could run my 2 ton mini split?

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 7 dny +2

      The challenge with Mini-Splits is they don’t have a contactor to isolate the unit from the grid when the unit is off. So it would involve more parts and pieces to make work. Thanks for watching!

  • @theinfamoussixcylinder3945

    Awesome idea to offset ac unit power but what if you could make it more efficient too. Company called cool and save. Makes a product that sprays your ac condenser with water. Water has a better thermal efficiency than air and will pull more heat out of the condenser making it more efficient

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 5 dny +1

      I’ve seen those cool and save units. What you said is right about the evaporative cooling providing better heat transfer for the A/C unit. My only gripe with that is the minerals in the water. I really don’t want to have to try and clean minerals from my condenser coils. One thought would be to capture the condensate water from the A/C and then pressurize that water through the misters. That’s essentially distilled water since it was in the air and then got condensed. So that solves the mineral issues, only problem now is that you won’t get very long sessions of misting that condensate water because you’ll evaporate it faster then it can condense. Got to contemplate this concept more. In any case, huge thanks for watching and commenting!

    • @theinfamoussixcylinder3945
      @theinfamoussixcylinder3945 Před 5 dny

      @theresatrickforthat well yes distilled water minus whatever would be in the air or whatever junk you be trapped in the coils. But other than that there's of course filter setups that would both allelize and acidify the water. The preference there is yours. And then besides that I would look into rainwater. Because just like you said through condensation and evaporation we get rainwater it's supposed to be pure water, that might do the trick for you. I guess the only question would be how far down the rabbit hole are you willing to go.

  • @coachgeo
    @coachgeo Před 8 dny +1

    hmmm... what abut when power goes out....... could this in anyway be feeding power into the grid and harm the lineman up the road fixing things....... Im thinking NOT cause your set up using the grid powered device's contactor (in this case the AC's contactor) to activate the solar setup. WIthout grid power.... the contactor cant' flip things to solar, thus solar setup remains disconnected from grid. Am I understanding that right?
    PS- contactor is in automotive terms essentially a solenoid in theory right?

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 8 dny +2

      You’ve actually got double protection in this case. 1. You’re right, the contactor physically disconnects the solar inverter from the grid. 2. These Enpahse inverters are grid tie capable. That means they have rapid shut down capability. So if they can’t see grid power, the utterly will not produce power. Yes, the contactor is very similar to a solenoid. Thanks for watching!

    • @user-cc5wu3lh1n
      @user-cc5wu3lh1n Před dnem

      Do you have a 1 or 2 pole contactor, just wondering if 2 pole would be safer to use in case there is some scenario where having one leg of the contactor always hot could cause the inverter to kick on when it shouldn’t.

  • @thomasshort6738
    @thomasshort6738 Před 3 dny

    How about a window air unit. What parts would be required?

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 3 dny +1

      Connecting solar to a window unit? Not as easily as a central unit. The best way for a window unit would be to get a solar power station, plug the window AC into that, and your solar panels. Here’s a review I did for a solar power station that might work well for you: czcams.com/video/Zdl3syXDUP8/video.htmlsi=QWl4Ml7eYH4qRHTT Thanks for watching!

  • @bhbaker220
    @bhbaker220 Před 10 dny

    I like it. The only downside is the loss of solar when the AC is off. Better application for a pool pump. Quick back of the envelope calculation is a 4 year payout with tax credit and only a 4 hour run time per day.

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 10 dny +4

      Yep! You would get more bang for the solar if it could run non-stop. But hey! Solar panels are cheap...batteries are not. So might as well reap some offset to your power bill while you're saving for other equipment to allow your solar to run non-stop all day! Thanks for watching!

  • @edenmolinar2086
    @edenmolinar2086 Před 14 dny +1

    I was wondering if you could add more solar panels and add a switching board that can instantly switch between the grid and the panels with the goal of totally or partially offset grid consumption and save on your electric bill. I'm sure there is a device that can do that and fool the electric meter into not charging you for any solar electricity production. I am thinking of doing something like what you have with the proper electronics to safely switch between grid and solar and mitigate any issues during cloudy days.

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 14 dny +1

      Sounds like a cool idea! Thanks for watching!

    • @STho205
      @STho205 Před 4 dny

      Before determining how...we should mathematically work out the "how much"
      My Heat Pump adds $40 to my power bill in summer based on the spring and early fall months I don't use it. It adds 65 to 70 in the winter months. Very efficient house, 1200sqft, good unit, ducted, blue ridge mtn foothills.
      So at that the grid cost of my HVAC is $360 per year. At best with 💯 solar running it and no batteries that's

  • @landonwilcox1837
    @landonwilcox1837 Před 2 dny

    Could go to a higher output panel and one inverter per panel. 5 in total to cover most of the heat exchangers draw.

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 2 dny +1

      I agree that would be simpler! I just already had those 200W panels so figured I'd put them to use! Thanks for watching!

    • @landonwilcox1837
      @landonwilcox1837 Před 2 dny

      @@theresatrickforthat I have 41 365w panels on my house each with an iq7+ inverter and sit at just over 80% offset. Im hoping to double the system size when I get our garage addition built. These panels are 3yrs old now and technology has already reached 450-500w panels on the market at close to the price my 365s were. 🤦🏼‍♂️

    • @landonwilcox1837
      @landonwilcox1837 Před 2 dny

      Oh and I have a 90kW Tesla model 3 battery to install as well when the new addition is up.

  • @EricMGomez-mc6yc
    @EricMGomez-mc6yc Před 10 dny

    Very interesting, diagram somewhere?

  • @chassdesk
    @chassdesk Před 2 dny

    How about a ecoflow with battery ecoflpw solar to that configuration

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před dnem

      Just need the new Delta Pro Ultra and we’d be set! Let EcoFlow know I need one will ya? Haha! Thanks for watching!

  • @redman2751
    @redman2751 Před 3 dny

    So you’d need about 8 more panels to completely offset the power useage?

  • @jairo33
    @jairo33 Před 5 dny

    Can this be done on a window unit?

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 5 dny

      Not as easily as a central unit. The best way for a window unit would be to get a solar power station, plug the window AC into that, and your solar panels. Here’s a review I did for a solar power station that might work well for you: czcams.com/video/Zdl3syXDUP8/video.htmlsi=QWl4Ml7eYH4qRHTT Thanks for watching!

  • @cgutowski471
    @cgutowski471 Před 13 dny +1

    Doing the same thing on the timer side of my in ground pool pump. Those IQ8s will eventually stop sending power without a full system connected and gateway. Recommend using the M215s which.
    As a test I would leave it connected for a week and report back. The other person that did this showed it stopped after 2.5 days.

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 13 dny +9

      Good for you! Are you using the M215’s on your pool setup? I don’t have information on how long the IQ8+ will export power without the gateway. But I will soon because I am working on wiring it up permanently to my A/C. The one thing that might make a difference is the fact that basically any time the A/C shuts off at night and there’s no solar coming in, it basically power cycles the micro inverter and resets everything on it. So I might avoid any issues due to that happening. But we’ll see! I’m going to make a follow up video once I get my installation done and it’s been running a bit. Thanks for watching!

    • @ssoffshore5111
      @ssoffshore5111 Před 2 dny

      @@theresatrickforthat I've been using the more reliable IQ7's (compared to the M215's) w/o a gateway in a similar fashion for over a year, no issues.

  • @Post_Oak_
    @Post_Oak_ Před 10 dny

    The micro controller can go from 12v to 240v?

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 10 dny

      It'll take 16-58V DC and output 240V AC. Yep! Pretty cool tech! Thanks for watching!

  • @donbrown4853
    @donbrown4853 Před 3 dny

    how many 400 watt solar panels to run a 3 1/2 ton heat pump?

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 3 dny +1

      It depends on a lot of variables. But a guess would be 5 400W panels minimum to offset it 100%. Thanks for watching!

  • @mr3745
    @mr3745 Před 8 dny +2

    Since you're not offsetting when the A/C is not running and there is a ramp up time for the inverter, this would seem to discourage frequent cycling. Have you investigated programming different thermostat set points during the warmest part of the day, potentially going cooler/running longer to maximize your output, effectively using your house as a (probably not terribly efficient) thermal battery?

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 8 dny

      This is a great idea to maximize the solar power you harvest! Doesn’t cost any extra…just a bit of programming of the existing thermostat. Great idea! Thanks for sharing and for watching!

    • @garyhiland6013
      @garyhiland6013 Před 8 dny

      @@theresatrickforthat Having a 2 stage system goes a long way toward longer run times. There may be some settings deep inside that will cause it to run longer, longer, longest in low stage before going into high output. BTW, you would say that your max PV output would have to be limited to the less than the wattage at the low output stage, yes?

    • @jeffreyjackson
      @jeffreyjackson Před 8 dny

      @@garyhiland6013 Yep! Longer run times do help! And yes, I would agree to size the solar array for low stage and not high stage since it runs in low stage 90% of the time. Thanks for watching!

  • @andredejonge5255
    @andredejonge5255 Před 5 dny

    Can you do a project with a mini split airco totally run on solar panels .
    Greetings from 🇳🇱 the Netherlands

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 5 dny +2

      Great video idea! I’d love to do that! Be sure you’re subscribed so you don’t miss it!

  • @quevicular
    @quevicular Před 2 dny

    So basically this is a supplemental system which is assisting this heat pump or air conditioner with 400 watts of power. Correct? If this is correct what's good about that system is that it can easily be done without a battery bank and directly imported into your higher wattage devices considering the fact of the sun output. Anything after the fact can be loaded into a battery bank for other lower wattage devices. Very cool

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 2 dny +1

      You're understanding is 100% correct! It is pretty cool! Thanks for watching!

    • @quevicular
      @quevicular Před 2 dny

      @@theresatrickforthat Mint. Direct power and I am assuming for the DC into the Inverter for ac out power at 220volt? to supplement. Start up capacitance for these heat pumps is fairly large and if something goes its usually the crapasshitter like mine has pooched 3 times already in 20 years but they keep pumping.

  • @kensvaty9652
    @kensvaty9652 Před 12 dny

    So, what size is your AC unit and who makes it? That 5 amp draw is impressive if it is a 3 ton unit. My old units need to get replaced.

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 12 dny

      Mine is a 3 tone Trane…but it’s two stage. So the amp draw you were seeing was on low stage where it starts. It’s been great and works very well for me. Thanks for watching!

    • @rocktman81
      @rocktman81 Před 11 dny

      @@theresatrickforthatVery roughly, about how many watts would a typical single stage 3.5 ton AC unit consume while running? (I’m sure that depends how n a number of variables, but ballpark?)

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 11 dny

      @@rocktman81You’re right…there are a ton of variables! I can only speak to my 3 ton unit in high stage the most watts I’ve ever seen it pull is just over 2000 or about 8.5 amps at 240V. Thanks for watching!

    • @zapa1pnt
      @zapa1pnt Před 10 dny

      @@rocktman81: The startup amp draw is what you need to be concerned about.

    • @garyhiland6013
      @garyhiland6013 Před 9 dny

      @@zapa1pnt Not sure why that is a concern. The grid takes care of that before the iQ8 jumps in. (and he has a soft start device at that) Am I missing something?

  • @mickwolf1077
    @mickwolf1077 Před 5 dny +1

    I had a few grid tie inverters to offset crypto mining, I didn't have a net metering agreement and didn't get questioned when I backed the grid. my smart meter only monitored consumption and showed 0 for export. here when you get a grid solar setup they will change your meter parameters. so they happily took my power and sold it next door.
    I first did this with old mechanical meter which wound back my usage, then the smart meters rolled out.

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 5 dny +1

      Using it for Crypto Mining is a great use case! Thanks for watching!

    • @ssoffshore5111
      @ssoffshore5111 Před 2 dny +1

      My smart meter tripped a tamper warning (it's been doing so for over a year as they would have to reset it) when I back-fed the grid, clearly my utility seems to be content using my excess power too!
      BTW, my system does have anti-islanding so no concern over zapping someone if the grid goes down.

  • @tomkabat8845
    @tomkabat8845 Před dnem

    Your test appears to be on a single stage air conditioner (the type that tends to cycle on and off numerous times most summer days). It looks like you could do the same with a modern inverter driven heat pump that works at moderate power levels without needing to cycle off numerous times and is able to work all winter long. Then you would get many more operating hours per year out of your solar. I'm assuming the heat pump has a similar 240V AC contactor you can connect behind.)

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před dnem

      Great thoughts! Heat pumps would be great to take advantage of the solar power year round! My particular AC unit is a two stage system so it runs on low stage for longer periods of time which helps in the way you described. Anything that runs longer would be even better! Thanks for watching!

  • @juanloo8913
    @juanloo8913 Před 7 dny

    What is your ac btu capacity?

  • @alpinerep
    @alpinerep Před 8 dny

    Pretty smart, dude! 400W and a micro inverter is offsetting about 20% of your consumption. Multiply this system 5X and you'll offset it 100% and still never export to the grid.

  • @xdsone
    @xdsone Před 6 dny

    You should be able to see the power usage in the micro air app to show when it's getting power from the solar

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 6 dny

      Yep! You probably could monitor the solar production with that app! Great idea! Thanks for watching!

    • @ChrisWasherPhotos
      @ChrisWasherPhotos Před 5 dny

      Only with the Bluetooth models.

  • @michaelaugustus5191
    @michaelaugustus5191 Před 13 dny +1

    how aqbout a pool fliter system and pool heater

  • @deanwells2859
    @deanwells2859 Před 10 dny +1

    Would you please run through the calculations you had to do to make sure that your solar panel output was sufficient to run your air conditioner? As you said, you have 400 watt of solar panels and it is running your air conditioner? What did you do so that at startup of your compressor you had sufficient amps to turn it on? Also, how many ton AC do you have?

    • @deanwells2859
      @deanwells2859 Před 10 dny

      If my math is correct, to have enough output from your solar panels to fully power your AC, you would need approximately 11 (200 watt) solar panels to produce enough power to run your AC. I understand the logic behind what you have done to supplement the actual power draw of your AC. With your current panels producing a little over 2 amps, I wonder what your cost savings would be if you were able to keep this running? How long then would it take you to pay for your current setup? (I realize you would probably have to put your panels in a different location for a more permanent setup.)

    • @deanwells2859
      @deanwells2859 Před 10 dny

      What is your SEER rating on your AC?

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 10 dny +2

      Good thoughts and questions! 400 watts of panels is NOT enough to run an A/C my size. The secret sauce is that enphase inverters are gird tie compatible. So it's just contributing what power it can from the panels and the grid makes up the rest which you can see in my amp readings. I lowered the amount of amps being pulled from the grid by 1.2 or so, but the remaining 4ish amps needed by the A/C unit to run were still being pulled from the grid. You could add more panels and micro inverters to offset the A/C 100% if you would like. Thanks for watching!

  • @billjohnson3344
    @billjohnson3344 Před 4 dny +2

    Missing the point here - just using a solar panel and microinverter part-time. Basically you are handicapping what the solar panel and microinverter can do for you by only running it a fraction of the time. Because you have this hooked up to the contactor output, the solar panel only supplements some power via the microinverter when the air conditioner compressor is on. Why would you not hook this to a free 240V breaker in your main panel (like regular solar), or the other side of the contactor? That way the solar panel is giving you power anytime there is sun - not just only when the air conditioner is on. Then you don't have that 5 minute delay where you have no output from the microinverter - each time the A/C kicks on. With this small solar setup of only 264W (AC output - your 1.1A measured), you'll never backfeed the grid - most homes draw more than that all the time. And if you did increase your setup and at times you did export some power, this is a non-issue - you are just giving free power to the grid that you won't be paid for. And the click bait title - this doesn't eliminate your A/C portion of your bill - just offsets a very small portion: 264W of say 4000W (4 ton A/C unit). 6.6%, not 100%

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 4 dny +2

      You're right, it would be ideal to have these panels running all the time, but I know some people who have been charged for excess power that went backwards through their non-net meter so better safe than sorry especially as it gets scaled up and you're pushing more power. And that's the beauty of this setup, start small with what money you have and scale from there! Offsetting 6.6% is still better than nothing while I continue to save for more panels and stuff! Thanks for watching!

    • @billjohnson3344
      @billjohnson3344 Před 3 dny +1

      @@theresatrickforthat Yeah sorry, it just makes no financial or logical sense to do this the way you've shown. The cost of the panels and microinverter will take forever to recoup vs. the fraction of the time the AC is on with sun shinning, and the power up delay. Most homes draw several hundred watts all the time - you won't be giving back to the grid. Just connect the microinverter and panels full time.

    • @ssoffshore5111
      @ssoffshore5111 Před 2 dny +1

      @@billjohnson3344 I agree 100%, IF your base load is always over what the solar panels can produce. In his case, if his baseload isn't 300W+, say it's only 200W+, he'd probably still be better off wiring only one panel to the main, compared to two on the AC that's only occasionally running, especially with the 5 min delay factored in after each cycle... Unless his AC basically runs most of the day.

  • @bsfishing7073
    @bsfishing7073 Před 2 dny

    Okay it one thing to see it running but will it pull enough juice to cool the house because it’s one thing to see it running the fan but the ac is run on something stronger let us see if it works in the house

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 2 dny +1

      Maybe I can make a follow-up video some the temps coming out of my indoor registers for you. But in the meantime, you'll have to let suffice my word that it was cooling inside. Plus, the sound on the video when the outdoor unit turns on...you can clearly hear the fan turn on first and then the compressor follows a few seconds later which is the soft start happening. But you can hear the compressor running which would imply cooling is happening inside. You can also tell the compressor is running when I take the amp draw readings from the AC unit itself which would also imply it's cooling inside. Thanks for watching!

  • @ninehundreddollarluxuryyac5958

    The panels are not supplying anywhere near the power to run the AC, they just offset a little bit and only contribute when the AC is running. They would contribute more power if you connect then to your breaker panel so they contribute all the time instead of intermittently when the AC is on.

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 5 dny +1

      What you said is true. However, if you don’t have a net metering agreement or off grid solar system, this way I show proof of concept only runs when the AC is on thus eliminating the chance of back feeding the grid which you would run the risk of of your hooked directly to the breaker. Thanks for watching!

  • @BrandonMitchell84
    @BrandonMitchell84 Před 7 dny

    I live in AZ , I want solar but it seems so overpriced for the actually ROI . That said I have two units and they draw a lot, but the cost of power is around 12c per kWh which use about 45kwh daily in early summer and higher as it goes on , so two panels would generate 5.2kwh which is not much of an offset realistically, you would need a lot more panels . For a heat pump though this is possible

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 7 dny +1

      Yep! And that’s the beauty of this setup. You can scale it as fast and as big as your wallet allows. But while you’re getting there, you can start getting at least some benefits. Thanks for watching!

    • @Bradwilliams11
      @Bradwilliams11 Před 5 dny

      With SRP this would be clutch during peak pricing, its like 40 cents per KWH in the peak hours

  • @loneeagle568
    @loneeagle568 Před 10 dny

    Can this be done with a window unit, or does this technology not exist yet

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 9 dny

      Window units are hard because you’ve got to wire some kind of relay in your self to turn the solar on and off with the cycling of the compressor in the window unit, plus good 120V micro inverters are hard to come by. For a window unit, I would recommend buying a solar power station, just plug the window AC into the power station, plug the solar into the power station and away you go! One to consider would be the Anker C1000. I did a review and real world testing on one you can check out. I think it’s even on sale for Memorial Day! Give it a look: czcams.com/video/Zdl3syXDUP8/video.htmlsi=2_45RG3CmyPGoiO1

  • @nobody-zc3fm
    @nobody-zc3fm Před 10 hodinami

    parralel hard start capacitors for starting amps will make it so you would never need starting amps only the running amps.

  • @sladeoriginal
    @sladeoriginal Před 13 dny

    Use it for water heaters and electric dryers.

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 13 dny

      Great ideas! Thanks for watching!

    • @coachgeo
      @coachgeo Před 8 dny

      if you use a generator switch(s) maybe..... you could use that to switch the solar/inverter setup to toggle between heaters, dryers, AC etc. You could just not have more than one on at a time unless you arrange it to where one location of the switches allows two "specific" things on- and those two things power draw when in use/ power draw added together, does not max out any more than the solar set ups parameters.

  • @MrBobbybrady
    @MrBobbybrady Před 4 dny

    Wouldn't each of those wires be 120 volts, and out of phase with each other would be 240? If so, wouldn't that be 1 amp x 120 v =120 watts. Both together would be 240 watts?

  • @MrBademy
    @MrBademy Před 4 dny

    if you put the right UF capacitor infront the air conditioner you can make it consume as much as 50w to function, remember its not the volts its the amps that matter

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 4 dny

      Not sure I 100% follow, but thanks for watching!

    • @MrBademy
      @MrBademy Před 3 dny

      @@theresatrickforthat your A/C uses around 500watts right ? you can change its consumption to 50watts by finetuning with capacitor on the input, it can alter the phase and is dialectric, it has some special effects

  • @THESNAKE8
    @THESNAKE8 Před 10 dny +4

    The number of people who have absolutely no clue what they’re talking about in the comments is appalling 😂

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 10 dny +2

      Haha! Right? To each their own I guess! At least makes for good humor relief! Thanks for watching!

    • @racinjason68
      @racinjason68 Před 9 dny +2

      I agree. Wattage is wattage. Those who understand know this works. He did a pretty good demo at showing the draw and then the output of the solar and the draw after the solar kicked in.

    • @TheBlovell3394
      @TheBlovell3394 Před 10 hodinami

      Not to mention everyone commenting "it sucks unless your AC runs all day" some of us live in Florida, Texas, Louisiana Mississippi etc. Trust me, it runs damn near all day, this would be worth it in 1 summer lol

  • @josephcatano4705
    @josephcatano4705 Před 4 dny

    Just a side thought, if someone had the right sun path, the panels could act as a slanted cover over the AC itself. My understanding is that Solar is more efficient in cooler temps, so maybe the fan/airflow would help cool them making them more efficient.

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 4 dny

      Very interesting thought! I like it! I sense we might need to do some testing on this at some point! Thanks for watching!

    • @jm-um1tx
      @jm-um1tx Před 2 dny +1

      That's hot air coming out of that unit. It's all the heat that isn't in the house anymore.

    • @josephcatano4705
      @josephcatano4705 Před 2 dny +1

      @@jm-um1tx wrong, that fan is not a part of the air in the house at all. It is a heatsink, but it's not hotter than the ambient air temperature and is most likely cooler than a black panel getting hit with direct sunlight on a 100 plus degree day. Not to mention, shading that unit could in return make it run cooler and more efficient as well.

    • @jm-um1tx
      @jm-um1tx Před 2 dny

      @@josephcatano4705 Didn't say it's the house air. It's air heated by the heat extracted from the house.
      There are lots of tricks to up the efficiency of an AC unit, and yes, shading it with the panels might help, but the panels themselves are already getting hit with direct sunlight, and blowing hot air on them isn't likely to help as much as you'd think.
      How much the panels are heated or cooled by the air is very much dependent on local conditions and you'd want to do detailed calculations to confirm whether it helps or hinders.

    • @josephcatano4705
      @josephcatano4705 Před 2 dny

      @@jm-um1tx I get your thought completely, but on average an outdoor unit will probably only be 15 to 25 degrees hotter Fahrenheit. A solar panel will easily be 40 to 50 degrees hotter. Just because it seems warmer to you doesn't mean it won't feel cool to the panel. I am also not talking about directly over the unit, it could have foot two or 3 feet of breathing room. Also the temp of the compressor or lines will be hottest part that I referred to. The air flowing around the unit doesn't transfer heat at a 1 to 1 ratio or even close. So the air flow would still be a couple degrees hotter than ambient temps. Resource, owner and maintainer of a 24kwh system in TX.

  • @SolarTechFL
    @SolarTechFL Před 7 dny +3

    Get an Enphase IQ Envoy with consumption CTS and set it to zero export then you can leave the micro inverter on all day and it'll never feed to the grid and it will help cover some of your home load making more use of your solar.

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 7 dny +1

      Yep! You could definitely expand to that when money allows. Thanks for watching!

  • @985haus
    @985haus Před 6 dny

    You are on the load side of the contactor? Correct?

  • @user-zq6pj5jo8j
    @user-zq6pj5jo8j Před 7 dny +2

    So the inverter is $189 + solar panels are $380 + wiring ~$50 = $620 to save 1 amp or 1/5 of your electricity on just your AC. If your power was $0.20 a KW you would break even in about 17 months time on 24/7 use. 1 amp = 0.24 KW X 24 hours = 5.76KW per day or $1.152 per day/$34.56 per month/$420.48 per year of savings.
    If the system works for over the 17 months you would start to see "Free Power". Which is not bad time frame..:)

    • @theresatrickforthat
      @theresatrickforthat  Před 7 dny +2

      You know the old saying…a penny saved is a penny earned! Haha! Thanks for watching!

    • @user-zq6pj5jo8j
      @user-zq6pj5jo8j Před 7 dny

      @@theresatrickforthat Yeah, id like to see what it takes to get the AC full on solar.

    • @OneDTwenty
      @OneDTwenty Před 4 dny +1

      He can't run the panel 24/7 for obvious reasons. The power output is also going to change with time of day and even time of year.