ONE MILLION views!! I never expected this video would go that far. Thank you everyone for the support, feedback, and ideas!! **NEW** Follow our Twitter page... twitter.com/LithiumSolarYT
Yikes! 1,000,000+ views, way-to-go Mike! Just goes to show the orbital trajectory when you hit that sweet spot for RUclips 😄 I had an inkling when my 3 week old comment hit 900+ likes that something must be reflecting in the views, hahaha.
I am an electrical engineer, product developer, and maker. I gotta say, this is one classy build that anyone would be proud of. Great job, and excellent presentation.
@@cdreid99999 worse, he doesn't say anything about the worst way to store up cells ever I mean tossed and piled up in a plastic storage without any concern about how they could possibily connect with each other
@@psycho__9945 so bad we didn't notice, shame on us all repent... Boing!... ...repent Psycho is king Boinngg! .... repent .... or maybe; you're wrong :)
I am 74 and we owned one of the first solar houses when I was about your age. We bought the house new and there were huge tax credits at the time for "going solar", however it was not solar panel electricity. It was pre-heated water for the water heater, plus solar heated air for the furnace in the day time, plus heating a large closet full of rocks to get hot and provide heat at night. The builder did not roof the house and then add the panels, but mounted the panels then roofed around them. After 4 years of fighting roof leaks, we had them removed and went back to "normal" operations. I would love to play with what you have for my camper, however, at my age, I no longer enjoy tedious work. I have added 3 100 watt solar panels but use them with 4 deep cycle batteries, 2 on the camper, and 2 for external use. I would enjoyed building your project if available in my younger years, but not anymore. Sure enjoyed watching the video though and it refreshed my electrical knowledge from my days as an avionics tech in the AF.
Nice, don't apologise for the length of the video,, the detailed instructions are excellent and will help anyone who wants to do a similar project or even a not so similar project using some of the same parts for that matter!
+1 I agree too. Don't worry about the video length. Most of the viewers does not know how to put things together or which part to use so those kind of videos with( step-by-step) details are GOLD. -:)
Yeah it really telks me how much wirk it is too. No wonder these batteries are so much money : ) you wouldn't want this done by a cheap factory either because there is a lot that can go wrong. Build this stuff in the U.S. or your own country so you can have better accountability : )
There are 2 amazing things I noticed about this video: - He literally tested 390 cells and found out their capacity on an individual level. That requires enormous amount of patience and labour. If one adds the labour cost to do all these things, the final cost would go to $1000 - He does not wear gloves while soldering. Considering that it is a 1.7-1.8kwH battery pack, this requires serious confidence on oneself Really, a fantastic educational video. Definitely deserved the 5 million views.
Definitely worth $1000-$1200 easy. Some people ought to get busy building and selling these. The only commercial ones I see advertised are the Patriot Power Generator 1800 for $2500 including one 100 watt solar panel.
Most people who would do this already have a few testers on hand and testing a similar number of batteries is mostly automatic and takes only an hour of total labor spread out over a few days. You could also buy better batteries that are already tested and assembled for not much more.
@@henlofren7321 not much more? please show me where you can buy better tested assembled batteries for not much more then 50cent/cell (not sarcasm I would honestly love to know)
It didn't even feel like 33 mins. I saw the title, found it interesting, started watching and here we are 33 mins later. Everything was spot on and perfect. Clear, easy to understand, easy to follow. Good stuff!
Dude, considering how much info you packed into that half hour, you have NOTHING to be apologizing for. That was an awesome build, and I'm glad you took the time to break it all down for us! Thank you for such an informative video!
“Creativity is more than just being different. Anybody can plan weird; that's easy. What's hard is to be as simple as Bach. Making the simple, awesomely simple, that's creativity.” - Charles Mingus
Actually he leaves out a lot of details so a beginner would not be able to follow these instructions. Literally half of the how to steps are left out, though a lot of the other channels show you how to do those steps
Dude, you killed it 💪 this definitely looks like a build you poured your heart into. The attention to detail and research is immaculate. Big ups man 👌👌👌
Exactly. The duration of the video is and should be as long as it needs to be. No shortcuts just because some may have the attention span of a house-fly. In these matters, there is no room for error.
I just saw some random dude in youtube making a massive diy solar generator for thirty minutes saying things i wont ever understand in a thousand years. and yet i still enjoyed every second of it
32:34 "I do apologise for the amount of effort I've put into making free, high quality educational content for you," Alright, we'll let it slip this time, but don't let it happen again! Awesome video, this was very helpful for an upcoming project I have. Thank you very much for making this!
Interesting name Cuthbert Nibbles. I consider this gentleman an electrical genius. I know mechanical but electrical not so much. I was very much impressed with the author of this video electrical knowledge and the ability to explain it clearly to people like me. Press on.
I had planned on posting why the hell you apologizing i came here to learn, but i see it was taken care of haha. Lithium great video man it helps beginners like me. Keep it up!
I enjoy this because this specific project is a rebuttal to everybody that says lithium batteries are an environmental nightmare, but you can recycle them and this is a prime example of the recycling process or at least one of them
Having worked on a variety of electrical systems and projects in the last 30 years, I found this video, informative and not too long. There was obviously a lot of research involved, and a lot of knowledge transferred in (what I thought) a short amount of time. Great Video. BTW it's now got over 1.8M views. Well done.
While I am interested in--intrigued by, actually--electronics, I know next to squat about the field. I DO know something about effective instruction, however, as a retired university professor with a Ph.D. in Instructional and Curriculum Theory. In my 40+ years in teaching, I have found few graduate students with your natural grasp of instructional design and pacing. Excellent job! I give you an A+. Keep up the good work, Teacher.
You have a good attitude about univeristies, but you're looking in the entirely wrong place if you are looking for natural talent and real experts with speedy paces. Universities are outdated and their scores only gauge general conformity; you will find many tricked people now tricked to only work hard, but aren't competitive nor smart, can't detect actual BS, and so on. However the 4.0 'excellent' 'on recruitment radar' graduate can be many times slower and less experienced than the 2.7-3.0 guy who was only there to grab a degree, and did not care to conform to useless scores of a school. A few times such individuals (even like myself, in computer engineering fields, programming, fixing, etc.) even opt intentionally to not spend so much money and time in education, which personally seems quite childish, and designed to make money from suckers rather than to enhance knowledge. Thus when I myself grabbed a stem degree, I did not care whether there was a C or an A given, even though my experience doing univeristy-level server work started easily at the age of 13 as a hobby. As thus, PHDs who are slow end up leaving inexperienced messes have tended to be good at ideas, but struggle to actually create them; even if they showed a perhaps 'unintelligent' devotion to learning the 'joke work' at a university. Many times these bozos pass by replicating or simply talking about other's work without understanding it at all. A few of these, I have had to clean up or fix for these PHD level guys work after years of them 'attempting' or 'making' something for some corporation or some group, resulting in fixing it in low time and for less than an annual salary; still these systems tend to cater to the rich, not the impoverished or smart ones in need, as the cheaters probably made more money anyway performing less effective results.
@@BlackOps78321 Not being mean but I often wonder about a commenter's lack of attention to detail when they make spelling or other simple errors. In science and math it makes a difference so careless writing gets my attention.
@@terretulsiak6563 Yeah, it's a problem if they don't convey information properly, but not so much if words or other things are shortened. Depends on the person really and it can become a major problem if they say something wrong at the wrong time.
Only thing he really went in depth with, was the care needed while working on a live battery. So you don't injure or kill yourself. Just see pedantically more as a negative imho.
As someone with a degree in electrical engineering and physics, I'm super impressed with the depth and expertise in this video and can vouch for its accuracy on most of the included topics. Definitely one of the best videos on this subject I've ever seen, well done, really enjoyed it!
Physics Guy, I am glad to see some common courtesy from you in congratulating this guy. We need to applaud enthusiasm, attention to detail, getting-on-and-doing-it attitude. A lot of the negative, ignorant and criticizing mentality from so many comments here are just that: kill-joys with nothing better to do. A few have given constructive suggestions to him, and that of course is the way to improve and progress. Like you, I really enjoyed this video.
@@turbocpt1Your criticizing other people's grammatical errors adds nothing positive to the conversation. It also forces me to point out how dumb you must be that you make a grammatical error yourself in your pathetic attempt to insult another's intelligence. Reread your comment: "Yeah, then you get the not so intelligent ones who DO not understand the difference....". It's DO not DOES. Only if the subject was singular would you use DOES, i.e. "the [..] ONE who DOES not understand" vs "the [..] ONES who DO not understand". And your name is Jesus too, LOL. An arrogant, rude, unintelligent Jesus, right.
@@LithiumSolar I make the same mistakes to man . Never try to predict what people are going to think. Do what speaks to you , then Guage and correct only from the constructive criticism. Dont take the negitive personally. Just like a battery you need the positive and the negitive .
given that i have a weird work schedule, yes i am pressed for how much i can watch literally every other time i sit down to watch youtube. today i chose this for my thirty minutes of watching before leaving for work. expecting it to be good based on comments.
Super late to the party, but thanks for this video. I followed your general approach and built my own 2.7 KWh solar generator over the summer. I found a tool box with wheels, a 3kw inverter, and added some QOL things such as rubber padding for shock, working lights, and a momentary switch and power resistor across the main breaker to prime the inverter if it's off for a while, but your design is solid. Tested and charged it through the fall and winter, but can't wait to do some field tests once it gets warmer, e.g. camping. Thanks!
When he says something you don't understand, Google it. Your brain will make beneficial connections, even more so since you enjoyed it. I say this even if you don't plan on doing projects like these yourself, you can never go wrong with more insight. I'm not an electrician or a mechanic, but it's amazing how much I've picked up on from just watching electronics videos and car videos on RUclips.
Hi, I'm a professional solar system designer and that build is really awesome. I'm currently working on a similar project but with different material and your videos inspired me a lot. Great work.👍
Nicely done! Just a suggestion for the temperature sensor: Run that thing withou ventilators running for as long you are comfortable. Take a picture with a thermal camera to find the hottest spot. Place the temperature sensor there.
Maybe the hottest spot isn't what needs to be monitored, but rather the spot with the component that is most prone to failure due to excessive heat? But then, maybe multiple sensors are in order.
Let the thing run in nominal use condition, then take thermal pic to see for hot spot. Repeat for say five times. If the hot spot presents any cooling issue, place the sensor there, otherwise you are good.
It's so beautifully made.. neat, clean, systematic with all functionalities I would say.. one can't ask for more than what the generator is capable of. If it was me, i would have made it a good business idea. Awesome job buddy. A lot of hard work has gone into it and it deserves as much appreciation. 5 stars all over 👍
@@SD_48 I was about to say... no need for such friends who just use you when they need you! eFF that guy. Lithium guy did a great video again! I would help with anything IT/Web related without asking for anything in return. Folks like Lithium dude need to go viral and be supported!
This is a list that I'm keeping updated since more than a decade. You're right. I work for the biggest Italian telecommunication company and along the years i only found 3 people worth of being saved to become part of my post-apocalyptic survival team. It would be nice to have this guy in my team as well.
@@franganghi Good luck with 600 meter high waves, 1000 mph winds and plasma strikes between us and the moon that destroy a city in seconds covering the earth. Prep your soul for the next earth no one gets out of here alive. Your flesh anyway
@@dickflinghammer58 we adapt and survive. Underground race of humans will evolve to mole people. We will explore the underground and start claiming the oceans! Time to build underwater worlds to shield from the winds and waves and plasma rays. Adapt or die 🎲
I agree that the length was not a problem since the information was so very interesting and knowledgeable. It’s impressive that you were so well spoken and extremely well versed on the information presented. This was a refreshing video to watch because you didn’t try to joke around or entertain everyone, you stayed on topic and presented a professional quality video from start to finish. Most people looking at technical videos just want the straight information without silly music or goofy antics. You did an excellent job with camera work and editing to make this a joy to watch. Thank you for your exceptional work and I look forward to more videos.
That's a phenomenal build! I'm newer than a newbie and wish I took electronics in school. Your instructions were well delivered. Such a cool project. I'm going to ask a experienced friend to assist/ coach. Thank you!
It would be safer to have the temperature probe in the exhaust flow. That way the fan doesn't stop once cold air came in, but only once the components aren't hot enough to heat up the air stream anymore.
But then when would it get the signal to start the fan. If its lower down the case, then more time would have to pass for the hotter air to reach down low to the exhaust port. Meaning more time without cooling.
@@rodon91 In such a small space, there are not many temperature differences until the fan kicks in. And the inverter has a fan, which would mix things quite well if the temperature goes up.
@@rodon91 The ideal solution would be many probes and a control computer, that makes the fan kick in, once any probe reaches the threshold and shuts the fan off, once the last probe fell under a threshold.
@@rodon91 Besides, the probe doesn't have to be lower, to be on the exhaust side. A bit of flow over the inverter is enough, to heat up the air, compared to the intake.
Very nice! This is the most thorough and technical solar/battery DIY project I've seen in a while. Mad skills, clean packaging and attention to detail 👍🏻
Thank you for the outstanding video. I am in that stage where I’m finally understanding how this stuff works and your video helped me a lot. Make more please!
This is an amazing build and a very cool video. As much as I’d love to follow along with you, I don’t know nearly enough to do it. It’s fascinating to watch, but outside my skill level. I don’t know if you’d be interested in producing videos like this, but I’d love to see a series of videos for small, basic, starter projects that build up to something this massive. I’d love to build a battery pack for charging my phone or laptop, even if it isn’t cheaper than a store bought one, just to learn - and slowly work up to something like this that could serve amazingly in an off grid, or emergency scenario.
Great video, I've used this for reference to several people including a few building off-grid buses and a mobile IT center. They were all going to use lead-acid batteries until i recommended this type of set-up. One recommendation I'd make is using XT90 connectors and tinning the leads before applying heat to the connector. It will allow you more solder w/o overheating the plastic.
@@inbedduringcovid3005 that’s what we are thinking. Possibly on the second one. Or tear down the one we are working on right now. We just got some go pros 😊
Yeah sounds smart considering they shut the power off where I live due to wind. Having something that that harnesses the wind would turn a negative into a positive have a power source run on the reason why they turn off the power lol. Have no idea what I'm doing but will keep learning and hope I can have something by this time next year to have as power shut off due to wind seems to becoming a common thing where I live with California being in such a drought with no end in sight
@@hateonskillz318 hmmm seems kind of weird to shut off power for wind but maybe they have some logical reasoning behind it.... but yeah bud it’s not to hard to grasp how to do this stuff. I mean my dad has been at it for 40 years now and as for me I’m going into my 7th year. It can seem daunting at first however once you get the basic principle down everything just falls into place. The biggest thing to start with is safety. That can not be stressed enough. I’ve been shocked many times luckily my body didn’t complete the circuit or else I probably wouldn’t b here right now. Regardless it was not fun. But yeah there are plenty of resources that you can learn from on how to do this stuff and once you grasp it you will never forget it. Also look into the NEC (national electrical code)
your not... solar is around $1.20 a watt... so he forgot to mention the $3500 + for the way to charge his battery LOL I say your not because you would know this.. and I'm not even including the charging unit for the battery or the heavy gauge wires in the 100's of feet you'd need.
THANK YOU FOR POSTING !!! ❤ You're GENIUS !!! and there's absolutely nothing wrong with anything! Editing is perfect! Build is perfect! Design is perfect and neat and the whole project is well thought out! I was an electrician for almost 40 years and you were talking way over my head! I APPLAUD YOU, SIR !!! And don't worry about video length! I could have took all that in for another hour! Pat yourself on the back...you did a great job! That's from Tennessee 🇺🇸
Very cool! One suggestion would be to rotate the inverter 180 degrees so the low voltage wires are as short as possible. They are carrying double the current, compared to the 110 outputs.
he would have to change the cooling fan direction; you could turn the battery packs so the dc came straight up to the inverter and leave it the direction it is now, there's nothing set in stone you can build it any way you like; the basic idea is there and working not to mention, DC is very forgiving when it comes to distance in wire length.
I wish people would stop calling these battery banks "Solar Generators" since they aren't anything of the sort. All the same, it's a really cool device and I applaud your ingenuity and industriousness in making it. May your sunshine always be adequate for your needs. 😀
Man, this is absolutely amazing, and beautifully done sir. I am an armature astronomer, and have been looking for a way to run my setup all night long, lights, , astro-cam, mounts, and laptops, phone, tablet....everything. This is awesome.
This is probably one of the most informative and super cool videos I've watched on YT. The amount of knowledge transferred in this video is amazing, yet I will admit this is still a daunting task, however clearly doable. Thank you for sharing your knowledge. That's the true value of information when it can be converted to usable knowledge. Well done and I didn't mind the long video at all.
Thank you so much I'm an electronic engineer and this brings me back to my collage days learning about a/c and d/c and sodering love how you walk ppl through the process
I wish so many others with great information to convey were as good as you at speaking clearly and knowing when to fast forward. Thanks for sharing this way.
You could buy these commercially this kind of configuration of a solar system generator 1000 watts for about $700-800 dollars.He doing a DYI build for $600-700 dollars it not worth the efforts with all that extra works.
Chi Chu but his is not only 100 watts. The ac side will put out 1500 witch is only limited to the inverter and the battery it self was way higher sorry I don’t remember exactly what it was but about 300 batteries that put out 3.8v and average 2600 mah now come on that is way better than a 100 watt. The amount of power in that box could keep you camping with a lcd tv, led lights and charge up phones all weekend or longer. It’s a great box and the only thing I know that is close to it is the Kodiak and it’s more like $1,800.00 or more and always sold out. So our wrong.
@@Chu3505 There is a lot to be said about spending the time doing a project that interests you. the cost is really not a factor, it's the satisfaction of knowing that you can build it yourself. Edison: Dear, I'm a little busy right now, I'm working on a new project! Wife: Stop wasting your time, everyone knows you can buy candles at the general store!
A note on Battery Hookup: I've ordered battery 4 times from them, and last order there were missing 1/3 of my order. E-mailed and told them, and tomorrow they will send me my missing ones, no problems! Awesome family-owned little business, and the only ones who deliver to us Canadian. You guys can trust them, they are great!
There's nothing wrong with being thorough no need to apologize thank you for what you do you're encouraging me to TAP back into a long lost passion of mine
Very cool project! Thank you, for sharing it with us! One thing I might suggest, though, is that you use the solar generator as a prop for the solar panel. This would allow you to angle the panel more toward the sun and it would keep the solar generator in the shade at the same time.
Wow even though I’m not so good with electronics and I could really grasp about 1/3 of the whole setup it’s cool trying to learn when someone lays the information out well. Thanks man. One of these days I’ll figure out how this stuff works for the most part. I was already confused when you hooked up the negative and positive batteries in groups lol
generator? you might get away with $1000.. solar... $1.20 per watt is the current.. so he's missing the $3500+ in solar panels :-\ you need help... talk to an electrician, this guy isn't telling you the whole story.
not even a project i was contemplating, nor do i intend to build one myself, loved the video. Just stumbled across it in the youtube rabbit hole, i definitely enjoyed it and i'm very pleased with your explanations and duly noting when and where special caution should be exercised. Great job explaining "the why" behind everything. There is usually more than one way to do something, in those cases there is sometimes a best way to complete the objective, but there is almost always a worst way to complete the objective. Sometimes experience is the only way to find the best and worst ways, but you are very mindful of good practices and do well to point out, to the viewer, your explanation as to why you did or didn't do something. Great job! Awesome build! Keep it up!
That is one of the cleanest DIY builds Ive seen, thanks for sharing! Will Prowse takes apart a lot of these portable generators and most of them aren't as nice as this, nor as versatile and run over a grand!
Honestly man I think you are a genius. This is the coolest thing I have ever seen. I wonder how much something like that would cost if you bought it already made. You sure know a lot of electrical tricks.
This was so cool. Liked and subbed. One suggestion: make a video where you DO show how you mounted and wired everything up in that box. There's no problem with having another video on this build. Some people who watch this video (which is information-dense and definitely not too long) will see everything and be able to fill in the details. But many others, like me, would benefit from seeing how you actually put everything together piece-by-piece, and a second video would be perfect for that. As the generator has already been built, even just a follow up video where you kind of disassemble it it a bit and point out what you did and how you did it would be superb. There's a lot to be learned by watching how someone who knows what they're doing approaches an assembly like this in addition to just the exact instructions.
I agree with you it would be nice if he did it that way. I don't care how long the video is as long as I understand it and learn from it. I came here to learn not to watch stupid junk
@@Macatho are you sure? Because every time I try and explain the most simple things about battery packs or charging to people around me, they look at me like I am from another planet. And I don't even know half of what this guy knows.
Superb. Several years ago I was thinking of something along the same lines, and about producing a consumer product brand 'Plug In Solar' where the panel and battery pack are together in a nice neat stand on castors that can be turned into a good orientation to maximise charging. That said I have non of the skills to do any of that, it was just an idea. Your skills and knowledge are off the charts!
I've done solar systems quite a few times before. your looking at around $400 for the battery's, $3500 +/- for the solar panels, $60 to $100 for the charging system for the battery's.. and I dont know in heavy burial grade cable... so he's telling you only part of the system... no way you could make it for that.. solar panels are around $1.20 per watt :-\
@@harleyme3163 Where did you get 3500$ for the panels? He talked about being able to connect one-three of those panels at the end. Must have missed something here. And cost for watt can be as low as 0,30$ for panels, prices are dropping all the time.
Thanks for this humble and innovative presentation. As for the length, it was over too soon for me! Thanks for the detailed equipment list, smart move with the disclaimer and thanks for sparing us an overdrawn intro segment.
ya, to bad 390 18650's would equal a 4.7 volt 1.01 kilowatt battery.. since thats not enough to put them in both series and parallel to up to voltage.. lol smarter every day... this guy doesn't know what he's talking about. and thats why professionals use 12 volt car or marine grade batteries... 12 volts at 70 amps = 5x as many as those batterie's for LESS cost lol
Don't worry about the length of the video you could of shown the whole build an I don't think one of your subscribers would complain one of the nicest portable generator builds I've seen. Maybe next video you can throw the parts you skip together cause I would watch that to. Thanks from one of your subscribers we really appreciate the work you do.
Maybe two or three part videos showing build, use, advantages, disadvantages, failures, next revisions ! Something like youtube: "Project Farm". Again, great project and video.
Number of views : It's uo to 5,316,746 views as of today May 12, 2022, at 2:30 a.m. MST. Hi, I know zero about electricity and anything presented in this video. But you have encouraged me to look into this as a V-E-R-Y longterm project to see if I could build one of these solar generators. (I'm 81 years old and need a project like this to stimulate my mind.) . . . . So, . . . I have a varied background of work and study experience, including old computer main frame S/W Operating Systems, and other endeavors. Your presentation is SUPERB. You've given me a new interest to feed my curiosity. Thanks.
@@ohasis8331 it depends on what country you live in. In Australia, it would be fine. Lots of grey nomads around here with solar panels and removable mounts so they can park their RV in the shadow and leave the solar panels in the sun...
I'm not planning to build one of these. The value of this video for me was that it served as a simple, no-nonsense description of what's inside an average portable power bank, kind of like demonstrating the back-engineering of one. In that context, for me it was super informative. Maybe one day I'll work under the supervision of an electrician and actually build one, which seems like a great (and money-saving) project, worth doing. Thanks a lot for this.
For those who don't know, tinning (coating the hot tip with a smidgen of solder/quickly wipe hot tip on damp sponge) the tip of your soldering iron should improve it's longevity and your soldering. Also, to avoid blobs of solder on your project (desirable), heat the two parts to be soldered up to the same temperature as the tip of the soldering iron by pressing the tip on it/them for several seconds. When you add the solder, it should be drawn to the parts, not balling up into little droplets of solder (undesirable). Your connections will be stronger with less resistance.
@Hugh Jaanus Ya know, I'm an American with a thick southern accent and even I get aggravated when literally everyone I've ever heard pronounces it wrong. Just say soldier without the "y" sound jeez..
Superb build and excellent video young man. You really inspire an old man to learn new tricks. I saw promising things about you when I watched your first video and have suggested your videos to others to watch. This one is your best to date so I now am expecting great things from you in the future as your viewership grows.
Thank you! I have put more time and effort into this particular video by far compared to the others. I think it was about 3 weeks of filming each piece, around work and family life :)
Wow just an amazing video , the fact that you just made your own generator from scratch. I didn't not care the video was long , i watched it every second of it. I read your disclaimer, you said your not a professional, you are right, you are beyond that! Straight Genius status RT! Anyone would be lucky to have you in their group , if there ever was an apocalypse! Only feedback would be give yourself more credit than you seem to give yourself, for what you do. Continue Stay humble my friend! Asking for feedback and constructive criticism, is a sign of high intelligence. Truly inspiring!
Absolutely great presentation of a worthwhile project, professional workmanship !! a pleasure to watch, and the time is really not an issue. Very informative. Thank you !!
You cleared up a few things for me that I had been struggling with, so thank you very much for your work. Still getting my head wrapped around bms components. I'm absolutely fascinated by all of it and I hope my rv project can be half as beautiful as yours
@fyrtiotva 1 day ago, "6:03 there is a miss-aligned battery, you got three cells in a row third row from the bottom, hope you corrected it!" Wow. Damn observant. I think worthy of a disassembly correction to prevent a fire source problem! Check with an knowledgeable authority!
Great work, thank you for this exemplary youtube video. Your a first rate speaker, the delivery was comfortable, intelligent, informative and honest. The build was spot on.. componentialy attainable, efficient design, construction and quality workmanship. If i had to guess i might say this was conceived, written, produced, narrated, filmed, edited, etc. by a team skilled professionals.
Very interesting. One of many old men that thought I could ease on out without learning about systems to produce electricity other than plugging in to the 110 volt socket. But the way things seem to be going in this country we need to adapt to the possibility that we have to be able to change with the times. Thanks for the video, very informative.
Dont apologise for making the video long, just do a part 2 if needed and put ads for more revenue, hopefully we can support you more watch time and views :)
Yeah. I prefer seeing entire processes carried out instead of jump-cutting to completed assembly - how different people handle their tools is _fascinating._
Great Job. The temperature sensor should be on the side of the case with the fan blowing out. Where it is now it reads the air as it blows in which is the cool air supply once it turns on the fan. The ambient warmed up running temp is at the output side of air moving through the unit since the input air will diffuse throughout the container.
Just to clarify about the circuit breaker, Blue Sea's is NOT the manufacturer, they don't manufacture breakers. The true manufacturer is Carling Technologies and they have lots of info online that explain the ratings and applications of the breakers. Cheers John
32:00 Don't worry about the length bro this was great!!! I've wanted to know how to make something like this in full detail and you've done a great job!
ONE MILLION views!! I never expected this video would go that far. Thank you everyone for the support, feedback, and ideas!!
**NEW** Follow our Twitter page... twitter.com/LithiumSolarYT
Congratulations 👏 buddy! Good follow-up video.
How much to build me one? Im new to boondocking and need this power.
@@csiacd watch the video lol
@@csiacd
Sounds like about $650, if you can handle boondocking you should be able to do this project!
Yikes! 1,000,000+ views, way-to-go Mike!
Just goes to show the orbital trajectory when you hit that sweet spot for RUclips 😄
I had an inkling when my 3 week old comment hit 900+ likes that something must be reflecting in the views, hahaha.
I am an electrical engineer, product developer, and maker. I gotta say, this is one classy build that anyone would be proud of. Great job, and excellent presentation.
Youre supposedly an electrical engineer but it doesnt bother you he calls a battery bank a generator????
@@cdreid99999 in tandem with the solar panels it is most definitely a generator.
@@cdreid99999 words mean nothing to these folk. So have a good wtca4w2dt day, lol.
@@cdreid99999 worse, he doesn't say anything about the worst way to store up cells ever I mean tossed and piled up in a plastic storage without any concern about how they could possibily connect with each other
@@psycho__9945 so bad
we didn't notice, shame on us all
repent... Boing!... ...repent
Psycho is king
Boinngg! .... repent .... or maybe; you're wrong :)
I am 74 and we owned one of the first solar houses when I was about your age. We bought the house new and there were huge tax credits at the time for "going solar", however it was not solar panel electricity. It was pre-heated water for the water heater, plus solar heated air for the furnace in the day time, plus heating a large closet full of rocks to get hot and provide heat at night. The builder did not roof the house and then add the panels, but mounted the panels then roofed around them. After 4 years of fighting roof leaks, we had them removed and went back to "normal" operations. I would love to play with what you have for my camper, however, at my age, I no longer enjoy tedious work. I have added 3 100 watt solar panels but use them with 4 deep cycle batteries, 2 on the camper, and 2 for external use. I would enjoyed building your project if available in my younger years, but not anymore. Sure enjoyed watching the video though and it refreshed my electrical knowledge from my days as an avionics tech in the AF.
Thanks for your service!
1
Sand battery!
Thanks for sharing.
Nice, don't apologise for the length of the video,, the detailed instructions are excellent and will help anyone who wants to do a similar project or even a not so similar project using some of the same parts for that matter!
+1 I agree too. Don't worry about the video length. Most of the viewers does not know how to put things together or which part to use so those kind of videos with( step-by-step) details are GOLD. -:)
ESX Virtualization y
Yeah it really telks me how much wirk it is too. No wonder these batteries are so much money : ) you wouldn't want this done by a cheap factory either because there is a lot that can go wrong. Build this stuff in the U.S. or your own country so you can have better accountability : )
this is a battery, not a solar generator..... =( clickbait
i agree too. a detailed tutorial is so valuable
There are 2 amazing things I noticed about this video:
- He literally tested 390 cells and found out their capacity on an individual level. That requires enormous amount of patience and labour. If one adds the labour cost to do all these things, the final cost would go to $1000
- He does not wear gloves while soldering. Considering that it is a 1.7-1.8kwH battery pack, this requires serious confidence on oneself
Really, a fantastic educational video. Definitely deserved the 5 million views.
Definitely worth $1000-$1200 easy. Some people ought to get busy building and selling these. The only commercial ones I see advertised are the Patriot Power Generator 1800 for $2500 including one 100 watt solar panel.
Most people who would do this already have a few testers on hand and testing a similar number of batteries is mostly automatic and takes only an hour of total labor spread out over a few days. You could also buy better batteries that are already tested and assembled for not much more.
I don't wear gloves while soldering and that just shows my arrogance
@@henlofren7321 the supplier (battery hookup) tests all of their cells and this has been vetted by other users of their store.
@@henlofren7321 not much more? please show me where you can buy better tested assembled batteries for not much more then 50cent/cell (not sarcasm I would honestly love to know)
It didn't even feel like 33 mins. I saw the title, found it interesting, started watching and here we are 33 mins later. Everything was spot on and perfect. Clear, easy to understand, easy to follow. Good stuff!
same here.
I Totally Agree. Keep up the great work. Nick🧔🏽, RUclips🔐: Lock Pick Nick & Nicholas Aarons.
Mee too! Great video. Didn't feel like a 33 minute video.
Dude, considering how much info you packed into that half hour, you have NOTHING to be apologizing for. That was an awesome build, and I'm glad you took the time to break it all down for us! Thank you for such an informative video!
This guy is amazing
Ever notice when someone knows what they are doing, they make their work sound simple and straightforward?
“Creativity is more than just being different. Anybody can plan weird; that's easy. What's hard is to be as simple as Bach. Making the simple, awesomely simple, that's creativity.” - Charles Mingus
Actually he leaves out a lot of details so a beginner would not be able to follow these instructions. Literally half of the how to steps are left out, though a lot of the other channels show you how to do those steps
“If you can't explain it to a six-year-old, you don't understand it yourself.”
― Albert Einstein
Oh I see were all just quoting random dead people.
Exactly that's why I never trust liberals they can never explain themselves nor are they straightforward lol. Unless they are name calling of course
Dude, you killed it 💪 this definitely looks like a build you poured your heart into. The attention to detail and research is immaculate. Big ups man 👌👌👌
I actually didn’t mind the video length one bit! Top notch presentation! Like the build, very inspiring; great effort. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Exactly.
The duration of the video is and should be as long as it needs to be.
No shortcuts just because some may have the attention span of a house-fly.
In these matters, there is no room for error.
Take your time. We here for you!!
The length was completely necessary: there is a HUGE amount of information here. Excellent work.
@@andrew_koala2974 .
@@andrew_koala2974 .
I just saw some random dude in youtube making a massive diy solar generator for thirty minutes saying things i wont ever understand in a thousand years.
and yet i still enjoyed every second of it
Same
Lol ! Me to
Lol, then RUclips has failed into giving you the correct algorithm based content. You need to report this as irrelevant 😀
32:34 "I do apologise for the amount of effort I've put into making free, high quality educational content for you,"
Alright, we'll let it slip this time, but don't let it happen again!
Awesome video, this was very helpful for an upcoming project I have. Thank you very much for making this!
Interesting name Cuthbert Nibbles. I consider this gentleman an electrical genius. I know mechanical but electrical not so much. I was very much impressed with the author of this video electrical knowledge and the ability to explain it clearly to people like me. Press on.
@AJ Castilla also incredibly useful should we end up in a Mad Max situation if the riots get worse
AMP hours... hours is dependant on the load you put on it. ps mine has 2 12 volt marine grade batteries for $460 WITH the generator.
I had planned on posting why the hell you apologizing i came here to learn, but i see it was taken care of haha. Lithium great video man it helps beginners like me. Keep it up!
Exactly 👌🏻
I enjoy this because this specific project is a rebuttal to everybody that says lithium batteries are an environmental nightmare, but you can recycle them and this is a prime example of the recycling process or at least one of them
It would be cool if All DIY videos were this well laid out. Enjoyed all 33 minutes, no apology needed.
Having worked on a variety of electrical systems and projects in the last 30 years, I found this video, informative and not too long. There was obviously a lot of research involved, and a lot of knowledge transferred in (what I thought) a short amount of time. Great Video. BTW it's now got over 1.8M views. Well done.
Almost 2.7 million now!
While I am interested in--intrigued by, actually--electronics, I know next to squat about the field. I DO know something about effective instruction, however, as a retired university professor with a Ph.D. in Instructional and Curriculum Theory.
In my 40+ years in teaching, I have found few graduate students with your natural grasp of instructional design and pacing. Excellent job! I give you an A+. Keep up the good work, Teacher.
Now that was an awesome comment and I totally agree
Ditto!
You have a good attitude about univeristies, but you're looking in the entirely wrong place if you are looking for natural talent and real experts with speedy paces. Universities are outdated and their scores only gauge general conformity; you will find many tricked people now tricked to only work hard, but aren't competitive nor smart, can't detect actual BS, and so on. However the 4.0 'excellent' 'on recruitment radar' graduate can be many times slower and less experienced than the 2.7-3.0 guy who was only there to grab a degree, and did not care to conform to useless scores of a school. A few times such individuals (even like myself, in computer engineering fields, programming, fixing, etc.) even opt intentionally to not spend so much money and time in education, which personally seems quite childish, and designed to make money from suckers rather than to enhance knowledge. Thus when I myself grabbed a stem degree, I did not care whether there was a C or an A given, even though my experience doing univeristy-level server work started easily at the age of 13 as a hobby. As thus, PHDs who are slow end up leaving inexperienced messes have tended to be good at ideas, but struggle to actually create them; even if they showed a perhaps 'unintelligent' devotion to learning the 'joke work' at a university. Many times these bozos pass by replicating or simply talking about other's work without understanding it at all. A few of these, I have had to clean up or fix for these PHD level guys work after years of them 'attempting' or 'making' something for some corporation or some group, resulting in fixing it in low time and for less than an annual salary; still these systems tend to cater to the rich, not the impoverished or smart ones in need, as the cheaters probably made more money anyway performing less effective results.
@@BlackOps78321 Not being mean but I often wonder about a commenter's lack of attention to detail when they make spelling or other simple errors. In science and math it makes a difference so careless writing gets my attention.
@@terretulsiak6563 Yeah, it's a problem if they don't convey information properly, but not so much if words or other things are shortened. Depends on the person really and it can become a major problem if they say something wrong at the wrong time.
This is by far one of the most pedantically made DIY videos I have seen on RUclips. Thank you for the perfect video tutorial!
Only thing he really went in depth with, was the care needed while working on a live battery. So you don't injure or kill yourself. Just see pedantically more as a negative imho.
As someone with a degree in electrical engineering and physics, I'm super impressed with the depth and expertise in this video and can vouch for its accuracy on most of the included topics. Definitely one of the best videos on this subject I've ever seen, well done, really enjoyed it!
Physics Guy, I am glad to see some common courtesy from you in congratulating this guy. We need to applaud enthusiasm, attention to detail, getting-on-and-doing-it attitude. A lot of the negative, ignorant and criticizing mentality from so many comments here are just that: kill-joys with nothing better to do. A few have given constructive suggestions to him, and that of course is the way to improve and progress. Like you, I really enjoyed this video.
if you can do better, post it :D
There are some very intelligent people who have the gift of explaining what there doing as well, this person is one of them.
Yeah, then you get the not so intelligent ones who does not understand the difference between "they're" and "there".... pffft.
@@turbocpt1 And there's even less intelligent people who make up words that aren't actual words like "pffft" for example!
@@Bongholio-fd5eq 🤣 🤣 🤣 it is not a word. It is replicating a sound in words, genius.
@@turbocpt1Your criticizing other people's grammatical errors adds nothing positive to the conversation. It also forces me to point out how dumb you must be that you make a grammatical error yourself in your pathetic attempt to insult another's intelligence. Reread your comment: "Yeah, then you get the not so intelligent ones who DO not understand the difference....". It's DO not DOES. Only if the subject was singular would you use DOES, i.e. "the [..] ONE who DOES not understand" vs "the [..] ONES who DO not understand". And your name is Jesus too, LOL. An arrogant, rude, unintelligent Jesus, right.
@@shlingus 🤣 🤣 🤣 You're not the brightest crayon in the pack.
Why do you apologize for a long video? Are people usually on a tight schedule when watching RUclips? Haha! Keep those videos long and awesome!
I don't know. I guess I thought the video was going to be too boring. Clearly that is not the case... lol
@@LithiumSolar I make the same mistakes to man . Never try to predict what people are going to think. Do what speaks to you , then Guage and correct only from the constructive criticism. Dont take the negitive personally. Just like a battery you need the positive and the negitive .
given that i have a weird work schedule, yes i am pressed for how much i can watch literally every other time i sit down to watch youtube. today i chose this for my thirty minutes of watching before leaving for work. expecting it to be good based on comments.
update: was not dissapointed. now im off to my job assembling electronics.
Sometimes it takes a long video to do a great diy project, if they don't like the length, let them figure it out on their own. Keep up the good work.
Super late to the party, but thanks for this video. I followed your general approach and built my own 2.7 KWh solar generator over the summer. I found a tool box with wheels, a 3kw inverter, and added some QOL things such as rubber padding for shock, working lights, and a momentary switch and power resistor across the main breaker to prime the inverter if it's off for a while, but your design is solid. Tested and charged it through the fall and winter, but can't wait to do some field tests once it gets warmer, e.g. camping. Thanks!
I wish i could do sth like that
I didnt understand a thing you said and I enjoyed every minute of this video.
When he says something you don't understand, Google it. Your brain will make beneficial connections, even more so since you enjoyed it. I say this even if you don't plan on doing projects like these yourself, you can never go wrong with more insight. I'm not an electrician or a mechanic, but it's amazing how much I've picked up on from just watching electronics videos and car videos on RUclips.
@Milan Knoeps X2
I'm glad this guy is on our side.
Same, great video
Me too, but loved it and felt so inspired.
Hi, I'm a professional solar system designer and that build is really awesome. I'm currently working on a similar project but with different material and your videos inspired me a lot. Great work.👍
🤣🤣🤦🤦
@@carrythelabelguy4563 What's so funny?
@@carrythelabelguy4563 loser
@@carrythelabelguy4563 exactly xD
@@gruisman
What exactly?
Nicely done!
Just a suggestion for the temperature sensor:
Run that thing withou ventilators running for as long you are comfortable.
Take a picture with a thermal camera to find the hottest spot. Place the temperature sensor there.
good thinking batman
or use a tunnel to connect fan to batt-pack >> and
Maybe the hottest spot isn't what needs to be monitored, but rather the spot with the component that is most prone to failure due to excessive heat? But then, maybe multiple sensors are in order.
Nice idea but thermal gun wud do same trick
Let the thing run in nominal use condition, then take thermal pic to see for hot spot. Repeat for say five times. If the hot spot presents any cooling issue, place the sensor there, otherwise you are good.
It's so beautifully made.. neat, clean, systematic with all functionalities I would say.. one can't ask for more than what the generator is capable of. If it was me, i would have made it a good business idea. Awesome job buddy. A lot of hard work has gone into it and it deserves as much appreciation. 5 stars all over 👍
I'd definitely pay him alot more than cost for something like that
@@paulsedyps84 💯 agreed
This is who you want as a friend during a zombie apocalypse.
well, he'd be the tech guy. but you'd also want a bushcraft/survivalist guy, a blacksmith guy, a geologist guy, and a carpenter guy.
Or trump take over
Why not now? Are you just using "friends" for your convenience?
Then you better keep these guys alive, and on/by your side lol👍
@@SD_48 I was about to say... no need for such friends who just use you when they need you! eFF that guy.
Lithium guy did a great video again! I would help with anything IT/Web related without asking for anything in return. Folks like Lithium dude need to go viral and be supported!
That was one of the most interesting videos I've seen in quite a while.
The COVID-19 Pandemic will expose us to a lot of great videos. This is definitely one of them.
I couldnt agree more
DITTO
If society collapsed, I want this guy on my survival team!
This is a list that I'm keeping updated since more than a decade. You're right.
I work for the biggest Italian telecommunication company and along the years i only found 3 people worth of being saved to become part of my post-apocalyptic survival team.
It would be nice to have this guy in my team as well.
@@franganghi Good luck with 600 meter high waves, 1000 mph winds and plasma strikes between us and the moon that destroy a city in seconds covering the earth. Prep your soul for the next earth no one gets out of here alive. Your flesh anyway
@@dickflinghammer58 we adapt and survive. Underground race of humans will evolve to mole people. We will explore the underground and start claiming the oceans! Time to build underwater worlds to shield from the winds and waves and plasma rays. Adapt or die 🎲
Step 1: go online and order batteries......well, crap....
@@franganghi well, if you say so ....
Very comprehensive. No complicated academic jargon. A good tutor for a quick on the run training for evryone. Bravo. Another 1M? Easy.
This is one of the best tutorial videos I’ve ever seen.
Thank you :)
Did you miss the disclaimer? Lol
No idea what hes talking about but this is awesome
That was great! Super interesting.
Well Hello there Jerry!
Having solar panel is like having free energy which is awesome
@@Vanilluc Well, they do still take some time to pay them self's back, but yes.
@@quantuminfinity4260 so, it's like investing pretty much ?
Don't you dare borrow this and rip it apart jerry
Great video. Seriously. Length doesn't matter when all dialogue is informative. Long videos that include unnecessary info is what is annoying.
Yes, there were hardly any words in this video that weren't informative.
I agree that the length was not a problem since the information was so very interesting and knowledgeable. It’s impressive that you were so well spoken and extremely well versed on the information presented. This was a refreshing video to watch because you didn’t try to joke around or entertain everyone, you stayed on topic and presented a professional quality video from start to finish. Most people looking at technical videos just want the straight information without silly music or goofy antics. You did an excellent job with camera work and editing to make this a joy to watch. Thank you for your exceptional work and I look forward to more videos.
Nunya Bitness 88 where an we buy stuff if living in the uk please
That's a phenomenal build! I'm newer than a newbie and wish I took electronics in school. Your instructions were well delivered. Such a cool project. I'm going to ask a experienced friend to assist/ coach. Thank you!
It would be safer to have the temperature probe in the exhaust flow.
That way the fan doesn't stop once cold air came in, but only once the components aren't hot enough to heat up the air stream anymore.
Thanks! I totally agree and have since moved it :)
But then when would it get the signal to start the fan. If its lower down the case, then more time would have to pass for the hotter air to reach down low to the exhaust port. Meaning more time without cooling.
@@rodon91 In such a small space, there are not many temperature differences until the fan kicks in.
And the inverter has a fan, which would mix things quite well if the temperature goes up.
@@rodon91 The ideal solution would be many probes and a control computer, that makes the fan kick in, once any probe reaches the threshold and shuts the fan off, once the last probe fell under a threshold.
@@rodon91 Besides, the probe doesn't have to be lower, to be on the exhaust side. A bit of flow over the inverter is enough, to heat up the air, compared to the intake.
Very nice! This is the most thorough and technical solar/battery DIY project I've seen in a while. Mad skills, clean packaging and attention to detail 👍🏻
Don't know what any of this meant, but this is mad entertaining!
No idea what hes talking about but this is awesome
Trade school is extremely cheap and quick. $2k will get you your journeyman's license in no time.
I like your funny words, magic man.
am i to late...?
Thank you for the outstanding video. I am in that stage where I’m finally understanding how this stuff works and your video helped me a lot. Make more please!
This video is so well done that I've watched the whole thing - even if I do not plan to do this ever myself. Stunning presentation!
This is an amazing build and a very cool video.
As much as I’d love to follow along with you, I don’t know nearly enough to do it. It’s fascinating to watch, but outside my skill level. I don’t know if you’d be interested in producing videos like this, but I’d love to see a series of videos for small, basic, starter projects that build up to something this massive.
I’d love to build a battery pack for charging my phone or laptop, even if it isn’t cheaper than a store bought one, just to learn - and slowly work up to something like this that could serve amazingly in an off grid, or emergency scenario.
"I don't have 240 in the garage"
That seems like a much easier project than what you've already undertaken.
I've already taken care of it since this video was published :)
Stove plug doubles as a welding plug nbd
@@countryhick1011 or just two leads from 110 from different sources done that many a Time
@@countryhick1011 Not to mention NEMA 14-50 is useful for charging the new EV :-)
Yea, that’s for sure !
Great video, I've used this for reference to several people including a few building off-grid buses and a mobile IT center. They were all going to use lead-acid batteries until i recommended this type of set-up. One recommendation I'd make is using XT90 connectors and tinning the leads before applying heat to the connector. It will allow you more solder w/o overheating the plastic.
I’m a professional electrician and I approve. My father and I are working on something similar. We are adding wind since it’s very windy where I live
I hope y'all do any kind of video about it
@@inbedduringcovid3005 that’s what we are thinking. Possibly on the second one. Or tear down the one we are working on right now. We just got some go pros 😊
Yeah sounds smart considering they shut the power off where I live due to wind. Having something that that harnesses the wind would turn a negative into a positive have a power source run on the reason why they turn off the power lol. Have no idea what I'm doing but will keep learning and hope I can have something by this time next year to have as power shut off due to wind seems to becoming a common thing where I live with California being in such a drought with no end in sight
@@hateonskillz318 hmmm seems kind of weird to shut off power for wind but maybe they have some logical reasoning behind it.... but yeah bud it’s not to hard to grasp how to do this stuff. I mean my dad has been at it for 40 years now and as for me I’m going into my 7th year. It can seem daunting at first however once you get the basic principle down everything just falls into place. The biggest thing to start with is safety. That can not be stressed enough. I’ve been shocked many times luckily my body didn’t complete the circuit or else I probably wouldn’t b here right now. Regardless it was not fun. But yeah there are plenty of resources that you can learn from on how to do this stuff and once you grasp it you will never forget it. Also look into the NEC (national electrical code)
your not... solar is around $1.20 a watt... so he forgot to mention the $3500 + for the way to charge his battery LOL
I say your not because you would know this.. and I'm not even including the charging unit for the battery or the heavy gauge wires in the 100's of feet you'd need.
I couldn't even begin to imagine being as knowledgible as this guy. To me electricity is just "phone workie juice." Keep doing a good job!
My phone workie juice is running out);
This thing will juice your phone for a LOOOONG time ;)
Reminds me of my dad. But my dad likes to explain shit until your ears bleed hahaha gotta love it
THANK YOU FOR POSTING !!! ❤ You're GENIUS !!! and there's absolutely nothing wrong with anything! Editing is perfect! Build is perfect! Design is perfect and neat and the whole project is well thought out! I was an electrician for almost 40 years and you were talking way over my head! I APPLAUD YOU, SIR !!! And don't worry about video length! I could have took all that in for another hour! Pat yourself on the back...you did a great job! That's from Tennessee 🇺🇸
Phenominal video. I couldnt pull this off in a million yrs
me either!! LOL
Very cool! One suggestion would be to rotate the inverter 180 degrees so the low voltage wires are as short as possible. They are carrying double the current, compared to the 110 outputs.
he would have to change the cooling fan direction; you could turn the battery packs so the dc came straight up to the inverter and leave it the direction it is now, there's nothing set in stone you can build it any way you like; the basic idea is there and working not to mention, DC is very forgiving when it comes to distance in wire length.
@@toddswenson9137 Great input
Well done. They aren’t too long if the content is valuable. Yours was
This is probably the coolest thing I've seen on RUclips in a while. Love it!
You should watch Thought Slime
I wish people would stop calling these battery banks "Solar Generators" since they aren't anything of the sort. All the same, it's a really cool device and I applaud your ingenuity and industriousness in making it. May your sunshine always be adequate for your needs. 😀
Man, this is absolutely amazing, and beautifully done sir. I am an armature astronomer, and have been looking for a way to run my setup all night long, lights, , astro-cam, mounts, and laptops, phone, tablet....everything. This is awesome.
This is certainly one of the cleanest looking DIY builds I've seen. Nice job.
This is probably one of the most informative and super cool videos I've watched on YT. The amount of knowledge transferred in this video is amazing, yet I will admit this is still a daunting task, however clearly doable. Thank you for sharing your knowledge. That's the true value of information when it can be converted to usable knowledge. Well done and I didn't mind the long video at all.
This guy doesnt even know what he as done, this is the greates video ii have ever watch conerniing a solar conection a jenuning ❤
Thank you so much I'm an electronic engineer and this brings me back to my collage days learning about a/c and d/c and sodering love how you walk ppl through the process
I wish so many others with great information to convey were as good as you at speaking clearly and knowing when to fast forward. Thanks for sharing this way.
Honestly I’m not gonna build this, but I watched the entire video. It’s interesting.
You could buy these commercially this kind of configuration of a solar system generator 1000 watts for about $700-800 dollars.He doing a DYI build for $600-700 dollars it not worth the efforts with all that extra works.
Chi Chu but his is not only 100 watts. The ac side will put out 1500 witch is only limited to the inverter and the battery it self was way higher sorry I don’t remember exactly what it was but about 300 batteries that put out 3.8v and average 2600 mah now come on that is way better than a 100 watt. The amount of power in that box could keep you camping with a lcd tv, led lights and charge up phones all weekend or longer. It’s a great box and the only thing I know that is close to it is the Kodiak and it’s more like $1,800.00 or more and always sold out. So our wrong.
Same. As i have little to no idea about electronics. But he makes it look easy
@@Chu3505 There is a lot to be said about spending the time doing a project that interests you. the cost is really not a factor, it's the satisfaction of knowing that you can build it yourself.
Edison: Dear, I'm a little busy right now, I'm working on a new project!
Wife: Stop wasting your time, everyone knows you can buy candles at the general store!
tim wegman sorry mean to write 1000-1,500 Watts not 100 Watts
A note on Battery Hookup: I've ordered battery 4 times from them, and last order there were missing 1/3 of my order.
E-mailed and told them, and tomorrow they will send me my missing ones, no problems!
Awesome family-owned little business, and the only ones who deliver to us Canadian.
You guys can trust them, they are great!
we have lithium ion battery. Do you need more?
There's nothing wrong with being thorough no need to apologize thank you for what you do you're encouraging me to TAP back into a long lost passion of mine
Very cool project! Thank you, for sharing it with us! One thing I might suggest, though, is that you use the solar generator as a prop for the solar panel. This would allow you to angle the panel more toward the sun and it would keep the solar generator in the shade at the same time.
Wow even though I’m not so good with electronics and I could really grasp about 1/3 of the whole setup it’s cool trying to learn when someone lays the information out well. Thanks man. One of these days I’ll figure out how this stuff works for the most part. I was already confused when you hooked up the negative and positive batteries in groups lol
This was the most concise and informative DIY videos for such a build. I'm definitely following this guide for my own DIY generator build.
generator? you might get away with $1000.. solar... $1.20 per watt is the current.. so he's missing the $3500+ in solar panels :-\ you need help... talk to an electrician, this guy isn't telling you the whole story.
I think I'm going to second that. This is the first one I'm coming back to for sure when I start my build.
I really wanna do this now and you really left no questions left unanswered
not even a project i was contemplating, nor do i intend to build one myself, loved the video. Just stumbled across it in the youtube rabbit hole, i definitely enjoyed it and i'm very pleased with your explanations and duly noting when and where special caution should be exercised. Great job explaining "the why" behind everything. There is usually more than one way to do something, in those cases there is sometimes a best way to complete the objective, but there is almost always a worst way to complete the objective. Sometimes experience is the only way to find the best and worst ways, but you are very mindful of good practices and do well to point out, to the viewer, your explanation as to why you did or didn't do something.
Great job! Awesome build! Keep it up!
"Made in Korea" on the box was a foreshadowing to the " Not a single cell tested bad..." awesome build, thank you for the inspiration!
What does that have to do with the batteries not testing bad
@@brutishorcbrutus they are known for their quality control
@@enja001 pretty sure they get the same quality cells as everybody else, dont they?
That is one of the cleanest DIY builds Ive seen, thanks for sharing! Will Prowse takes apart a lot of these portable generators and most of them aren't as nice as this, nor as versatile and run over a grand!
I'd love for Will to get his hands on this and do a video. He would probably love this build.
@@MrPenguin1w I too would like Wills opinion on this build
The Jackery that costs $1000 is only 1002Wh
Dude you are so down to earth chilli milli, I could listen to you for hours. Amazing content you are providing here :)
Honestly man I think you are a genius. This is the coolest thing I have ever seen. I wonder how much something like that would cost if you bought it already made.
You sure know a lot of electrical tricks.
Goal Zero sells a 3 kW lithium pack for $3,000 with outlets
This was so cool. Liked and subbed. One suggestion: make a video where you DO show how you mounted and wired everything up in that box. There's no problem with having another video on this build. Some people who watch this video (which is information-dense and definitely not too long) will see everything and be able to fill in the details. But many others, like me, would benefit from seeing how you actually put everything together piece-by-piece, and a second video would be perfect for that.
As the generator has already been built, even just a follow up video where you kind of disassemble it it a bit and point out what you did and how you did it would be superb. There's a lot to be learned by watching how someone who knows what they're doing approaches an assembly like this in addition to just the exact instructions.
I agree with you it would be nice if he did it that way. I don't care how long the video is as long as I understand it and learn from it. I came here to learn not to watch stupid junk
Man this was sketchy
Same
This guy freaking knows what he‘s doing. Haven‘t seen that in a while
This is taught in high school brosky.
@@Macatho I wouldn't trust a highschooler with that many lithium ion cells though.
He doesn't presolder his wires and connetions... That's a beginners mistake...
@@jarleskogly8388 But trusting them with household supplies like chlorine and ammonia is fine :)
@@Macatho are you sure? Because every time I try and explain the most simple things about battery packs or charging to people around me, they look at me like I am from another planet. And I don't even know half of what this guy knows.
Superb. Several years ago I was thinking of something along the same lines, and about producing a consumer product brand 'Plug In Solar' where the panel and battery pack are together in a nice neat stand on castors that can be turned into a good orientation to maximise charging. That said I have non of the skills to do any of that, it was just an idea. Your skills and knowledge are off the charts!
It wasn’t too long! The details give understanding.
No idea what hes talking about but this is awesome
😂 😂 😂 😂 the same here 😂
I've done solar systems quite a few times before. your looking at around $400 for the battery's, $3500 +/- for the solar panels, $60 to $100 for the charging system for the battery's..
and I dont know in heavy burial grade cable... so he's telling you only part of the system... no way you could make it for that.. solar panels are around $1.20 per watt :-\
@@harleyme3163 Where did you get 3500$ for the panels? He talked about being able to connect one-three of those panels at the end. Must have missed something here. And cost for watt can be as low as 0,30$ for panels, prices are dropping all the time.
Thanks for this humble and innovative presentation. As for the length, it was over too soon for me! Thanks for the detailed equipment list, smart move with the disclaimer and thanks for sparing us an overdrawn intro segment.
Great video- no need to apologize for making a great video! Very well done. Nice build, nice editing, nice narration- really enjoyed it.
This is probably the coolest video I've ever seen. I seriously am thinking of building one. I really appreciate that you put links to the components.
Thank you :) If you have any questions along the way, feel free to ask!
ya, to bad 390 18650's would equal a 4.7 volt 1.01 kilowatt battery.. since thats not enough to put them in both series and parallel to up to voltage..
lol smarter every day... this guy doesn't know what he's talking about. and thats why professionals use 12 volt car or marine grade batteries... 12 volts at 70 amps = 5x as many as those batterie's for LESS cost lol
@@harleyme3163 I can't tell if you're being serious or just being generally arrogant. I think you need to go do some more research.
Don't worry about the length of the video you could of shown the whole build an I don't think one of your subscribers would complain one of the nicest portable generator builds I've seen. Maybe next video you can throw the parts you skip together cause I would watch that to. Thanks from one of your subscribers we really appreciate the work you do.
Maybe two or three part videos showing build, use, advantages, disadvantages, failures, next revisions ! Something like youtube: "Project Farm". Again, great project and video.
Well done video - concise, clear, to the point and of utmost importance....no crappy music!! Bravo!
Number of views : It's uo to 5,316,746 views as of today May 12, 2022, at 2:30 a.m. MST.
Hi, I know zero about electricity and anything presented in this video. But you have encouraged me to look into this as a V-E-R-Y longterm project to see if I could build one of these solar generators. (I'm 81 years old and need a project like this to stimulate my mind.)
. . . . So, . . .
I have a varied background of work and study experience, including old computer main frame S/W Operating Systems, and other endeavors. Your presentation is SUPERB. You've given me a new interest to feed my curiosity. Thanks.
When it this kind of quality and thoroughness, please don't excuse the video length.. well done
or make it your thing keep making videos we love them.
this has been one of the coolest videos I've watched in awhile. Well done sir, thank you for sharing!
This + a solar panel with a removable mount on the roof of an RV.
@@ohasis8331 Well shit
@@ohasis8331 it depends on what country you live in. In Australia, it would be fine. Lots of grey nomads around here with solar panels and removable mounts so they can park their RV in the shadow and leave the solar panels in the sun...
I'm not planning to build one of these. The value of this video for me was that it served as a simple, no-nonsense description of what's inside an average portable power bank, kind of like demonstrating the back-engineering of one. In that context, for me it was super informative. Maybe one day I'll work under the supervision of an electrician and actually build one, which seems like a great (and money-saving) project, worth doing. Thanks a lot for this.
Great video showcasing human ingenuity at its best. Energy sustainability can be had by the masses. Greetings from Toronto.
For those who don't know, tinning (coating the hot tip with a smidgen of solder/quickly wipe hot tip on damp sponge) the tip of your soldering iron should improve it's longevity and your soldering. Also, to avoid blobs of solder on your project (desirable), heat the two parts to be soldered up to the same temperature as the tip of the soldering iron by pressing the tip on it/them for several seconds. When you add the solder, it should be drawn to the parts, not balling up into little droplets of solder (undesirable). Your connections will be stronger with less resistance.
thanks for basic soldering tips!
@Hugh Jaanus i like to say all 3, sometime mixing in a 'sh' sound in the beginning.
@Hugh Jaanus Ya know, I'm an American with a thick southern accent and even I get aggravated when literally everyone I've ever heard pronounces it wrong. Just say soldier without the "y" sound jeez..
Superb build and excellent video young man. You really inspire an old man to learn new tricks. I saw promising things about you when I watched your first video and have suggested your videos to others to watch. This one is your best to date so I now am expecting great things from you in the future as your viewership grows.
Thank you! I have put more time and effort into this particular video by far compared to the others. I think it was about 3 weeks of filming each piece, around work and family life :)
Ditto !
Wow just an amazing video , the fact that you just made your own generator from scratch. I didn't not care the video was long , i watched it every second of it. I read your disclaimer, you said your not a professional, you are right, you are beyond that! Straight Genius status RT! Anyone would be lucky to have you in their group , if there ever was an apocalypse! Only feedback would be give yourself more credit than you seem to give yourself, for what you do. Continue Stay humble my friend! Asking for feedback and constructive criticism, is a sign of high intelligence. Truly inspiring!
I built it! Thank you n shipped it out for use in Malawi
Impressive! :-)
We have this product. Do you need more?
@@amandawang6130 Do you have this product? you selling?
This is a great video and your very good at showing and explaining what you are doing and WHY you are doing it. Thanks for putting this together.
Absolutely great presentation of a worthwhile project, professional workmanship !! a pleasure to watch, and the time is really not an issue. Very informative. Thank you !!
Dude, this is one of the few video in youtube that worth every minute, Thanks!!!
You cleared up a few things for me that I had been struggling with, so thank you very much for your work.
Still getting my head wrapped around bms components. I'm absolutely fascinated by all of it and I hope my rv project can be half as beautiful as yours
6:03 there is a miss-aligned battery, you got three cells in a row third row from the bottom, hope you corrected it!
7:45 it's still peaking through just under the spot welder lol
8:02 top of video :O
@fyrtiotva 1 day ago, "6:03 there is a miss-aligned battery, you got three cells in a row third row from the bottom, hope you corrected it!"
Wow. Damn observant. I think worthy of a disassembly correction to prevent a fire source problem! Check with an knowledgeable authority!
noticed that myself. Glad someone said something.
yeah this is a problem the bateries will all leak in little time or worse if this is not fixed.
@@ElTurbinado I am not sure how someone that is so detail oriented could miss that. We can only assume that he did notice it eventually.
Great work, thank you for this exemplary youtube video. Your a first rate speaker, the delivery was comfortable, intelligent, informative and honest. The build was spot on.. componentialy attainable, efficient design, construction and quality workmanship. If i had to guess i might say this was conceived, written, produced, narrated, filmed, edited, etc. by a team skilled professionals.
Very interesting. One of many old men that thought I could ease on out without learning about systems to produce electricity other than plugging in to the 110 volt socket. But the way things seem to be going in this country we need to adapt to the possibility that we have to be able to change with the times. Thanks for the video, very informative.
Dont apologise for making the video long, just do a part 2 if needed and put ads for more revenue, hopefully we can support you more watch time and views :)
or go to Odysee.
I have watched this video till the very end most enthusiastically even do I'll never going to build this... Great job buddy!
"apologize for it that long" - uhm - nope - nice to see it that long instead of cut down to just 15min - 20min
Yeah. I prefer seeing entire processes carried out instead of jump-cutting to completed assembly - how different people handle their tools is _fascinating._
Context is king.
New to exploring solar power, but really enjoyed your build. A longtime sailor with a 40 year old boat. Solar is a new idea for the boat and myself...
Great Job. The temperature sensor should be on the side of the case with the fan blowing out.
Where it is now it reads the air as it blows in which is the cool air supply once it turns on the fan. The ambient warmed up running temp is at the output side of air moving through the unit since the input air will diffuse throughout the container.
someone else stated the same thing. he has since made the change
Just to clarify about the circuit breaker, Blue Sea's is NOT the manufacturer, they don't manufacture breakers. The true manufacturer is Carling Technologies and they have lots of info online that explain the ratings and applications of the breakers. Cheers John
32:00 Don't worry about the length bro this was great!!! I've wanted to know how to make something like this in full detail and you've done a great job!