Bet you had some interesting trips with it!


Went on sale for $150 and we pulled the trigger:tuxonpup wrote: ↑Thu Jun 26, 2025 8:18 amI was surprised by how much hanging the boom compromised the solar generation. I did make a point of wiping down the panel as well. We spent a bit of time working with the bimini over the course of the trip, far enough back that you can eye the wind vane top-o-mast, far enough forward that the helm seat can swing up securely for motor to rudder switches. We think we can make it rigid enough to mount two 130 watt flex panels on it while still swiveling between those two positions. That should keep them far enough out of the sail's shadow so that at least one panel will always be generating. Our '96 just has the single pivoting mast crutch on the transom, which is nice for motoring with the mast down and at an angle so as not to be in the center of the cockpit, but no poor man's radar arch to attach solar to.Russ wrote: ↑Sun Jun 22, 2025 6:29 am
It is interesting how some solar panels will drop 90% of their output if just a small section is blocked from the sun (like your boom). It's wise to clean them as I'm sure dust and bird poo reduces their output.
My solar panel is mounted off the back of the boat over the motor. Themast crutch makes for a perfect poor man's arch for mounting.
LiPo's are interesting and honestly, I know little about them. My understanding is that they need to be charged differently from lead acid and therefore can't be connected to the motor charging circuit. This forum has several Captains who have done Lipo and love it.
Looks like Amazon sells the Starlink power cables. Looks like a 100 USBC PD to barrel jack with some weather proofing. How did yours get broken? Does the Starlink actually use 100 watts?
Okay, doing a little research, the Starlink will run native on 12v. THAT's what I would do rather than convert 12v to 5v USBc PD then back to 12v inside the Starlink dish. https://www.amazon.com/Starlink-Waterp ... B0F6YFNC4M
REFRIGERATION:
You CAN run a proper 12v compressor based cooler off solar. I do it all the time as long as you limit how often you open it.
Do NOT under and circumstances buy one of those Piezo/Electric coolers. The only thing they are good for is draining your battery.
Mine is pretty old now, however, there are many 12v compressor based fridge/freezers out there. If used properly and your other 12v devices (Starlink, computers) you could operate off 2 solar panels.
https://www.amazon.com/EUHOMY-Refrigera ... NH4NX?th=1
We've got the second identical solar panel and 100Ah LiFePO4 battery already delivered. I've been running a pair of small 20Ah LiFePO4s on our kayak rig for a few years, at first in parallel, then in series when we got a 24V electric motor. The DC to DC converter/MPPT solar controller shown in the video is a boost/buck design that can do 12V to 24V conversions and manage both lead acid and LiFePO4 batteries, but we're just using it for straight 12V house power and will parallel the LiFePO4s for 200Ah. Consensus seems to be I was just shy solar capacity as I never recharged past 12.6V - 12.8V after the second day when the initial wall charge had been run through. Recharging with the boom in place never allowed the battery to fully recover, hence a new unshaded location and doubling our panel collection.
Which brings me to your 12V cooler experience. I'm going to try it, in a small $200 fashion as I want to stick it right where the current 48 quart Coleman is, the 14x23x14.5D cooler bathtub under the aft dinette seat. Looks like that limits me to a 24-26 quart compressor cooler, but I won't be sticking a 7 pound block of ice in there either. Searching off your link I found a couple under this size that would fit, requiring 45 - 60 watts when running: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0F1S ... X0DER&th=1
Yeah, I really hadn't factored that in until I got it and saw the airflow recommendations. May just pull the tub and and secure it in the bilge using the built-in tie downs.
Okay, today is the first day off I've had since... June 8th? The day after we got home from Powell, so finally some time to hook up these new battery killers, I mean lifestyle upgrades! Just plugged the cooler into AC for the first time, it came on measuring 72 degrees internal temp and set for 32 degrees. Suggestions? I set it for 36 degrees but I actually have no idea what temp my kitchen fridge is currently.OverEasy wrote: ↑Fri Jul 04, 2025 7:40 am Hi Tuxonpup!
Nice cooler! Great upgrade!
An option to consider is to add a pair of strategically 4x4” or larger through ventilation grill holes through the side walls of the tub and bench seat for air to circulate. One aligned with where the cooler air intake is and one where the exhaust is. If you desire one could also add a 12VDC muffin fan to one or both penetrations to help circulate the cooling air… I’ve seen some hybrid set-ups where a simple small dedicated solar cell array drives the fan(s) by day and battery used by night… (they didn’t want a full on solar power array)….Just a suggestion.
Best Regards,
Over Easy![]()
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Without the tub and with the compartment open you should be fine.
Thanks for the feedback everybody! With the Guppy in storage 400 miles to the North and our next trip 400 miles out West taking a class on a completely different boat, this planning/testing from home is all we can do for the next 2 months or so. My 12V plans are pencil drawn and from before we bought the cooler, which is kinda why we surface-mounted everything so far and didn't cut any holes.Russ wrote: ↑Fri Jul 04, 2025 7:04 pm You are experiencing the cooling from a REAL compressor. I wish there were better tech, but so far this is it.
Give it some air and it will be fine. I'm not familiar with the X but if it can vent out anywhere it should be fine.
That area is subject to the hull heat transfer right?
Looking forward to your reports of how this works out.''
I bet your solar will do fine as long as you turn off that dang starlink when not needed.
I would love to see your 12vdc plans.
I hadn't managed to shake this idea yet, then this week Vicky told me she ordered that electric thing I left in the Amazon basket while she was doing some shopping. Electric thing? I don't remember adding any electric thing? I looked it up and it was a 24V>12V converter I was looking at and must have put in the basket instead of saved for later, ah well, at worst an affordable experiment.Russ wrote: ↑Sun Jul 06, 2025 12:47 pm 24v?
Interesting. So those devices would have their own 24v circuit?
You still need 12v for most other stuff.
That will take some planning
It would reduce the wire gauge required for the fridge.
I had to run a heavy wire for my fridge because the voltage drop over distance.