this post was submitted on 07 Jan 2024
6 points (100.0% liked)

WetShaving

33 readers
8 users here now

This is a community of enthusiasts, hobbyists and artisans who enjoy a traditional wet shave: brush, soap, and safety or straight razor. We are a part of the WetShaving community found on Reddit, Discord, and IRC.

New subscribers welcome!

Please visit our wiki, which is always and forever a work in progress.

๐Ÿช’ Check out these alternative front-ends for this server:

https://gem.wetshaving.social/ - a nice modern interface

https://old.wetshaving.social/ - designed to look like old.reddit.com

Our sister Mastodon instance is https://wetshaving.social/.

๐Ÿช’ Track the uptime of our various services here:

https://uptime.splettnet.com/status/wetshaving

๐Ÿช’ Community Rules

Rule 1 - Behaviour and Etiquette
Rule 2 - Content Guidelines
Rule 3 - Reviews and Disclosure
Rule 4 - Advertising
Rule 5 - Inappropriate Content
Rule 10 - Moderator Discretion

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
 

Share your shave of the day!

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[โ€“] walden@sub.wetshaving.social 3 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

I figured this would be cheaper than hiring an electrician, and so far it might be haha! It turns out solar is addicting. I'm on my 3rd charge controller after getting the bug (twice) for something more fun.

The next step for me is an additional 100w panel which is already on its way to me, and possibly moving them in the future so somewhere with more sun.

As far as power tools, the inverter I have is only 1000 watts. It turns out that power tools often use more than that! I've been able to use an angle grinder, but I had to blip it to get it spinning, let the inverter catch up, then run it up the rest of the way. An additional battery might help, because the problem might be voltage drop.

I've used my soldering iron which is no sweat. I've also used one of those vibrating multi-tools.

I don't want a bigger inverter because then I'll definitely need more batteries, thicker wires, etc.

It's a good system for charging smaller batteries though, so for someone with cordless tools it would work well. This time of year it's too cold to charge lithium batteries though.

A lot of people with this type of setup have nice LiFePO4 batteries, but they have the same cold temp problem.