Either one is quite capable of killing you if you don't know what you are doing.On to bigger and better things. Batteries or capacitors. Which is more safe? Keep in mind that I live in Florida and it stays damp here.
You'll be able to store more energy in batteries, but the downside to lead acid batteries is that the cells will experience sulfation if allowed to be in a discharged state too long. Dampness shouldn't cause problems with batteries because the voltage is low. You don't want standing water to collect and touch both terminals because water with contaminants conducts.[snip] Batteries or capacitors. Which is more safe? Keep in mind that I live in Florida and it stays damp here.
Unlikely to explode while being charged from solar cells or being discharged unless you short the terminals.Batteries tend to explode on how you use them.
Cars, lawn tractors, motorcycles. These are usually "wet" batteries. Other battery operated equipment could have SLA (Sealed Lead Acid batteries) which are maintenance free.Lead acid. That would be a car battery, right?
Voltage with no load. As you apply a load to the solar cell, it's voltage will drop.What is open circuit voltage?
OK, that helps define the amount of juice you need. I assume you need a modest amount of light just to see your way around and maybe a higher intensity in a small area, for reading or such. How many hours of light do you need each night? Do you already have the lights? (If so, let us know what they need.) How much power do your other gadgets need, in terms of voltage and mA-hours?My primary goal is to light up my living space at night and to charge my electronics....
I have an old beach cruiser frame that I stripped most of the parts from to get my boyfriend's bike working. That leaves me exactly an intact frame, the rear rim, the chain and the pedal sprocket. Enough for the generator you mentioned? My question would be what defines small for a dc motor in this application and in what type of device am I likely to find one?Maybe some kind of physical energy generation that didn't have to been done for long, charging a super capacitor? If you had a bike you could use a small dc motor as a charging device. If you could focus the frensel on something like this...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermoelectric_generator
Are you near running water?
Maybe you could build a simple Stirling engine and charge some recycled lead acid batteries.
I actually have a growing collection of solar lights from doing just what you said. Well that and my dumpster diving expeditions (one reason why a reliable flashlight is necessary) I have also started packratting small electrical devices (mostly toys) and stripping out their circuit boards for useable components. I also have all of the circuit boards from the television I salvaged the lens from so, I have a lot of odds and ends to pick through.I don't know if this would work, but one idea would be to go around and ask people if they have any old solar yard lights that they don't want, working or not. I don't know about the newer models, but the older ones actually had a NiCd AA battery in them. What you could do is repair and modify a whole bunch of them, like maybe a hundred, or two. What I would do is disconnect the LED inside, or somehow make it so that the LED never turns on when it gets dark. If you have land for a garden, you might be able to set them all out, and if it takes several days each to recharge the battery inside, so be it. You could harvest charged batteries each evening, just like a crop, enough to power your lights or recharge your phone.
If you can scavenge a battery holder that will hold 4 cells, and a connector appropriate for your phone, it should be possible to make a phone charger.
Although it sounds like you have a place to stay, I receive that you are homeless, so it might be a good idea to keep everything very simple. As such, if it were me, I wouldn't try to have good lighting. I would use one yard light as a lantern if I needed to get around, or read something short, but I would basically try to do everything during the day, and just sleep when it got dark. I've done that on occasion when camping, and it is kind of boring compared to city life, but it's also peaceful.
Funny you should mention Christmas lights as I was bemoaning the want of some that ran off of solar (I did not know such a thing existed) I have two strings of the LED (plugin) type ones and if I could only power those, they and some white paint would provide all of the light I need, at least on the inside.OK, that helps define the amount of juice you need. I assume you need a modest amount of light just to see your way around and maybe a higher intensity in a small area, for reading or such. How many hours of light do you need each night? Do you already have the lights? (If so, let us know what they need.) How much power do your other gadgets need, in terms of voltage and mA-hours?
Let's see if we have the other facts: You live in Florida and you have NO power grid access. (This last fact is critical. If you can plug in twice a week, the project is a lot different.) You have next to nothing to start your project except maybe some solar panels from solar lights. Your source of additional materials is uncertain and opportunistic - i.e., the dumpsters.
I think the solution is a modular system that can expand easily as you acquire more pieces. Roderick nailed it in #31. It should be fairly easy to find "spent" solar lights. Once you learn about them, you'll be able to tell if the panel is good, the condition of the battery and so on. As Roderick described, set up a little farm of solar battery chargers. You can either harvest the AAs or AAAs every evening or disable the lighting circuit so they don't waste power at night.
You're unlikely to find a large PV panel cast away, although I have gotten some nice panels from solar-powered Christmas lights that had failed and been tossed out. That would be a sweet find for you but not likely to happen.
If you can get your hands on an old car battery with decent life left in it, that can open up some options. But it will require some help and circuitry to be useful. We can provide those details if/when this becomes a viable option for you. At some point you might want 120V AC, and for this you'll need an inverter, the thing folks use in their cars to provide household current. Out of the question?
I had looked into that option and was under the impression that, once powered, an alternator required something like 10hp in order to turn it and create the charge needed to power the battery...An automobile alternator would work with the bike parts you have to generate a small amount of electricity and charge a 12V lead-acid battery. You could use a V-belt around the bike rim to drive the alternator.
An alternator can be readily found in an auto junkyard, just make sure it's one that has a built-in regulator.