Solar battery charger
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- Tocsik
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- Location: Denver
Solar battery charger
Harbor Freight has a solar battery charger on sale.
I know it's Harbor Freight but it has some pretty good reviews. I noticed the electrical connector looks almost identical to the one that I have hooked-up on my scooter for the Battery Tender.
Might be something worth trying. If you park outside you could maybe mount it with Velcro and charge your battery while at work.
Overall dimensions: 13-3/4" L x 4-3/4" W x 1/2" thick
Has anyone tried this for a car or bike?
I know it's Harbor Freight but it has some pretty good reviews. I noticed the electrical connector looks almost identical to the one that I have hooked-up on my scooter for the Battery Tender.
Might be something worth trying. If you park outside you could maybe mount it with Velcro and charge your battery while at work.
Overall dimensions: 13-3/4" L x 4-3/4" W x 1/2" thick
Has anyone tried this for a car or bike?
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- Rob
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- Tocsik
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No, but when I ride in the Winter with my Oxford Heaterz turned on, it drains my battery a bit so that I sometimes can't use them on the ride home.TVB wrote:Not particularly useful for winterizing a scooter, however.
If I were to park where the scooter would get some sun while at work, my battery might be pumped back up to a full charge

I got a super coupon in my email today that makes this thing $11.99.
I might just have to get it and play around a bit.
- agrogod
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Make sure it has an internal blocking diode which prevents battery drain during low/no light conditions. Nothing worse than having the life "sucked" out of the battery.
"When your mouth is yapping your arms stop flapping, get to work" - a quote from my father R.I.P..
always start with the simple, it may end up costing you little to nothing
always start with the simple, it may end up costing you little to nothing
- skully93
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You get sun in the winter? Bizarre.Tocsik wrote:No, but when I ride in the Winter with my Oxford Heaterz turned on, it drains my battery a bit so that I sometimes can't use them on the ride home.
If I were to park where the scooter would get some sun while at work, my battery might be pumped back up to a full charge.

- Tocsik
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- Location: Denver
over 300 days of sun/year here!TVB wrote:You get sun in the winter? Bizarre.Tocsik wrote:No, but when I ride in the Winter with my Oxford Heaterz turned on, it drains my battery a bit so that I sometimes can't use them on the ride home.
If I were to park where the scooter would get some sun while at work, my battery might be pumped back up to a full charge.
Even with the temps are below freezing, steam will be coming off of wet roads from the intense sun!

- Lotrat
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I got the orange one last year. I tested it out. My battery read 12.6V. This state of charge on an open battery indicates a 75% charge level. Charge voltage climbed to 13V in just under 30 minutes. I let it charge for 60 minutes. I pulled the charger and let it sit for an hour. It was at 12.8V (100%). Cranked it over once and shut it down. Voltage dropped down to under 12V while cranking, but once turned off the voltage rebounded to 12.7V. 75% to full charge in an hour. The older version had a charge "indicator" built into the 12V adapter.

It now lives in my VW... in a storage lot.

It now lives in my VW... in a storage lot.
Last edited by Lotrat on Fri Jul 13, 2012 4:06 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- siobhan
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I've yet to see any of these solar chargers worth the price, no matter how cheap. It seems we're not "there" yet. I just set up my bikes to charge electronics while I'm riding (when I'm on my long camping trips and there's no electricity for a few weeks). I'd like to read a review after you've had it a while.
Fahr mit mir!
http://scootcommute.wordpress.com/
http://scootcommute.wordpress.com/
- Lotrat
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I got my solar charger 5/12/2011 (14 months ago). Charged my scooter battery just fine. It now maintains my VW battery just fine. No issues. It still works. $16 dollars well spent IMO.siobhan wrote:I'd like to read a review after you've had it a while.
I found the manual. I was wrong, it's unregulated... 22.25V open voltage. 1.5 watts (about 100mA). Not worried about it being unregulated on a car battery. My radio probably had a higher parasitic draw, but I just need to maintain the battery voltage.
Just to compare, a battery tender Jr. is rated for 750mA and it's designed to "maintain". 100mA isn't much, but it does pump current into the battery. It can maintain and even charge small batteries, but it's not going to power your TV while you're camping.
- siobhan
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Lotrat, thanks for the review. I need something to charge camera, helmetcam, communicator, phone batteries when I'm my long trips. Right now it's still easier to use the bike's battery. I figure, it's just one more thing to carry and I've got my kit down pretty small now. I do appreciate your update!
Fahr mit mir!
http://scootcommute.wordpress.com/
http://scootcommute.wordpress.com/
My scooter is my portable generator on long trips, for recharging my phone and batteries for my camera. I usually do this while I'm riding, but I'll also plug my phone in at camp if it's running low. I don't bring along anything else that needs juice, so it's adequate. (A lot of the places I camp have electrical service, but I don't bother bringing along AC chargers to use it.)