fratermus

joined 1 year ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 months ago

I have Visible (Verizon MVNO) for $25/month. I put the SIM in an LTE router I got off amazon (open box) for $42.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 2 months ago (10 children)

Could my 10 year old SDF account still exist?

Mine does. I finally remembered to log back in and there she is...

Caveat: the hostname had changed; I signed up at lonestar.sdf.org IIRC (no longer extant) and now it is on freeshell.org

I found my notes from ten years ago so I know what my username was

Another caveat: I think usernames were truncated to 8 chars in that time period. Don't know if that's the case now or not, or if extra chars are thrown away anyhow.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 months ago

Wireguard self hosting

I parsed this as Wireguard self-loathing and thought "that's a little harsh". :-)

[–] [email protected] 5 points 2 months ago

warning: some non-linux included below

  • minix
  • slackware
  • early Debian
  • FreeBSD (ftp installs instead of 20 floppies! OMG!)
  • Debian
  • Crunchbang <-- loved that original project
  • Solaris (friend gave me a Sparc 5)
  • DSL, Puppy linux (had a tiny netbook)
  • **Debian on workstations and servers since ~2014 **
  • various debian-based distros on RPI

I do spin up other distros in a VM from time to time to see what's what. Most recently NixOS since people won't STFU about it. :-)

[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 months ago

Yeah, they look like horses and act like cats. My grey was the finest doggo I ever had.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 months ago (4 children)

I’m not a fan of the Mises Caucus, so I think this is hilarious.

Same. the Mises Caucus was to the LP as Trump was to the GOP - a takeover by opportunists.

I know next to nothing about Chase Oliver

Seems broadly in line with (pre-Mises Caucus) libertarianism. Definitely more in line with my thinking than anything the D or R parties are putting out.

being gay and young will certainly set him apart from the old men he’s competing against

I don't think young and gay necessarily carries intrinsic benefit, but I agree there is some instrumental benefit. It will set him apart as you say, and also will reveal bigots and reactionaries for what they are.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 months ago

Is there a good online tool for calculating the cosign of solar Zenith

There are an online calculators like this one from NOAA. This fork adds the ability to update the time with a click rather than manually. There are others but I haven't played with them much.

Since I travel constantly I've been on casual lookout for an app that does the calcs for us based on local time / position but I haven't seen any. Several apps show the solar zenith angle and we can take the COS of that manually with a calculator with trig functions. The standard android calculator app will do it.

so I can know how much solar my my panels could be making in ideal conditions?

Yeah, it's an imperfect tool for our purposes but better than nothing. Combining it with data from a solar irradiance meter would be great but right now I can't justify ~$100 to devote to the cause. :-)

[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 months ago

I’d rather mods who don’t want outside participation to be able to stop their communities from showing in All.

Agreed. Niche communities can get hammered with downvotes and "I don't want to read this" comments from readers of ALL.

It's confounding: "show me everything", then "I don't like the content in your niche community". WTF?

[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 months ago (1 children)

I physically damaged one of the 3x 190w in that array. Since the originals were obscure NOS I couldn't find another one to replace it. It was summertime so I was able to get by with 380w but that would not be sufficient to meet needs during other seasons.

So I started looking for replacements that would fill the available space. I ended up with 3x of the Trina 250w that flooded the market, the ones that Will Prowse would make famous in his video.

I made the swap on BLM land outside Las Cruces, NM and donated the 2x 190w to a family in a skoolie the next camp over. They had a 2x 100w set out so I figured they could use them. The deal was they had to come over and carry them them, I wasn't going to deliver. :-)

[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 months ago (3 children)

Interesting. I'd never looked at my "lifetime" numbers before; I am keenly interested in daily harvests to understand the power budget but haven't thought about the overall harvest.

Caveat: mine are higher, relative to size, because I live in the vehicle and so place more loads on the system. The rig has had two setups

  • 570w array for the first 1,630 days = 2.82MWh
  • 750w array for last 457 days = 0.89MWh
  • total 3.71MWh
[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 months ago

the stove over to induction next. I hate it when the batteries fill back up by 10am and I waste solar meanwhile I am still buying propane for the appliances.

It's possible. For the 11 months I've been cooking from excess solar power (December is a little short). I still carry propane for heating and a few things that seem to work better over flame.

 

This year was more tumultuous than usual. A couple things were literal once in a lifetime events.

 

[I found a] 3qt crockpot to replace the 2qt and 4qt. Back to my original setup. The Crockpot 3120 is rated at 75w/150w and I measured it at 69w/134w.

 

I believed the forecast, which said it would be partly cloudy. In reality it was overcast all day, no blue sky at all. It was lightly raining most of the time. Pic to the right (PF parking lot) shows how low the cloud cover was. Clouds were obscuring the top of the nearby Franklin Mountains.

 

I noticed the panels were unusually filthy. An excellent opportunity for an experiment! I dug out the ladder, put the pushbroom head on the multi-purpose stick, and found a suitable terrycloth hand towel...

4
winter plans (mouse.mousetrap.net)
 

including a prediction that I will need to use shore power for the first time in over 5 years :-\

 

I just realized it’s been two years since I installed the LiFePO4. No regrets.

 

Just before the eclipse started (0913 local) the system was making 260w.... “first contact” began and the MPPT algo started thrashing around... at full annularity (1037 local) it was making only 26w. This lines up with the prediction of “89.6% obscuration”.

 

I recently bought some closeout honeycrisp apples and bosch pears and ate most of them. I had one of each left over and decided to skin each and cook them down with a bit of cinnamon and lime juice. Then I decided I'd make pancakes the next morning to make use of it.

I cooked down the fruit on the 300w lab hotplate. Tried to use it for the pancakes in the naan pan but the 4" head was too hot in center. Tried to use a flame diffiuser but 300w wasn't enough grunt to get through that. So I ended up cooking the pancakes over a single-burner propane stove.

They tasted better than they looked. :-)

 

I found a tennis ball in a park in SF, and figured it’d make a good aromatic medium for the peppermint oil I bought to repel mousemonsters. I cut it into quarters with a utility knife.

I applied peppermint oil to each fuzzy surface and mounted one under the hood and one on the floorboard near where I saw mice enter.

 

I've noted before that when I stealth camp in cities my charging percentage from alternator increases from ~5% to ~10% of total production. The increase isn't needed (solar could cover it) but the alt gets a chance to play.

Since I am moving at least twice a day (3x with PF showers) I've had an opportunity to record a higher frequency of engine starts and LFP bank acceptance. The setup:

  • 180A alternator that typically runs at 14.2v
  • Battery Doctor VSR setup left over from my previous FLA bank
  • 150Ah 12v LFP bank
  • SoC and voltage measurements below taken from BMS before engine start
  • current measurements taken from BMS though it agrees with shunted battery monitor. (I can see the BMS via bluetooth from the driver's seat but I can't see the monitor)
  • solar contribution and loads ranged widely, leading to variance.

Over the last ~20 runs, the average state of charge was 72%, bank voltage 13.20v, charge acceptance 0.183C (27.39A)

    SoC Vbatt       C       A
    60	13.07	0.245	36.75
    72	13.15	0.130	19.50
    69	13.13	0.120	18.00
    27	12.95	0.270	40.50
    80	13.29	0.150	22.50
    80	13.27	0.240	36.00
    81	13.30	0.170	25.50
    77	13.22	0.165	24.75
    39	13.03	0.260	39.00
    95	13.30	0.115	17.25
    48	13.06	0.235	35.25
    86	13.56	0.120	18.00
    90	13.25	0.220	33.00
    90	13.26	0.165	24.75
    62	13.08	0.240	36.00
    92	13.27	0.084	12.60
    92	13.27	0.090	13.50
    58	13.07	0.235	35.25
    89	13.26	0.140	21.00
    84	13.26	0.215	32.25
    49	13.07	0.225	33.75

Given average charge acceptance of 27.39A, the obvious comparison here is to a 30A DC-DC like the Orion-TR. The DC-DC would have a much more stable charge rate, typically ~30A except late in the charging process when acceptance at Vabs tapers.

 

Charge to ~100% SoC then allow the system to settle back to the quasi-float voltage... Final measurements taken when the sun had gone down enough that solar could no longer hold Vfloat.

view more: ‹ prev next ›