#solarcharging — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #solarcharging, aggregated by home.social.
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https://www.evshift.com/458160/f-gas-prices-ive-been-running-all-my-e-bikes-for-free/ F*** Gas Prices, I’ve Been Running All my E-Bikes for Free! #ChargingAnEvWithSolar #DiySolar #EBike #EBikeSolarCharging #ebike #EbikeSolarCharging #Ebikes #ElectricBike #ElectricBikes #ElectricDirtBike #ElectricMotorcycles #ElectricVehicles #EV #EvSolarCharing #free #FreeSolarCharging #Gas #GasAlternatives #GasPriceIncrease #GasPrices #HowToChargeEbike #HowToChargeElectricMotorcycle #HowToChargeEV #Ive #motorcycles #Prices #Running #SolarCharging #SolarEnergy #SolarPanel
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A local white-tailed jackrabbit (actually a species of hare, not rabbit) is in solar-charging mode, having found a bit of sunbeam passing between our house and the neighbour's in the mid-afternoon.
#rabbit #hare #jackrabbit #SK #YQR #wildlife #RabbitsOfMastodon #SolarCharging #sunbeam
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A local white-tailed jackrabbit (actually a species of hare, not rabbit) is in solar-charging mode, having found a bit of sunbeam passing between our house and the neighbour's in the mid-afternoon.
#rabbit #hare #jackrabbit #SK #YQR #wildlife #RabbitsOfMastodon #SolarCharging #sunbeam
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A local white-tailed jackrabbit (actually a species of hare, not rabbit) is in solar-charging mode, having found a bit of sunbeam passing between our house and the neighbour's in the mid-afternoon.
#rabbit #hare #jackrabbit #SK #YQR #wildlife #RabbitsOfMastodon #SolarCharging #sunbeam
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A local white-tailed jackrabbit (actually a species of hare, not rabbit) is in solar-charging mode, having found a bit of sunbeam passing between our house and the neighbour's in the mid-afternoon.
#rabbit #hare #jackrabbit #SK #YQR #wildlife #RabbitsOfMastodon #SolarCharging #sunbeam
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A local white-tailed jackrabbit (actually a species of hare, not rabbit) is in solar-charging mode, having found a bit of sunbeam passing between our house and the neighbour's in the mid-afternoon.
#rabbit #hare #jackrabbit #SK #YQR #wildlife #RabbitsOfMastodon #SolarCharging #sunbeam
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Garmin Fenix 8 Smartwatch Review
When it comes to outdoor fitness trackers, the Garmin Fenix 8 smartwatch holds near-mythical status. After all, it’s…
#NewsBeep #News #Gadgets #AU #Australia #day #differentsize #feature #fitnesswatch #GarminFenix #microphone #mipdisplay #mm #Model #route #smartwatchreview #solarcharging #Technology #training #unmatchedbatterylife #voicecommand
https://www.newsbeep.com/au/350770/ -
Garmin Fenix 8 Smartwatch Review
When it comes to outdoor fitness trackers, the Garmin Fenix 8 smartwatch holds near-mythical status. After all, it’s…
#NewsBeep #News #US #USA #UnitedStates #UnitedStatesOfAmerica #Gadgets #day #differentsize #Feature #fitnesswatch #GarminFenix #Microphone #mipdisplay #mm #Model #route #smartwatchreview #solarcharging #Technology #training #unmatchedbatterylife #voicecommand
https://www.newsbeep.com/us/347873/ -
Garmin Fenix 8 Smartwatch Review
When it comes to outdoor fitness trackers, the Garmin Fenix 8 smartwatch holds near-mythical status. After all, it’s…
#NewsBeep #News #US #USA #UnitedStates #UnitedStatesOfAmerica #Gadgets #day #differentsize #Feature #fitnesswatch #GarminFenix #Microphone #mipdisplay #mm #Model #route #smartwatchreview #solarcharging #Technology #training #unmatchedbatterylife #voicecommand
https://www.newsbeep.com/us/347873/ -
I take a look at the Victron SmartSolar MPPT charge controller and make some comparisons to the Renogy Rover. Spoiler alert: Victron nails it.
https://w6hs.net/review-victron-energy-smartsolar-50-amp-mppt-solar-charge-controller/
#SolarCharging #Victron #SolarPower #OffGrid #LiFePO4 #Renogy #MPPT
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I take a look at the Victron SmartSolar MPPT charge controller and make some comparisons to the Renogy Rover. Spoiler alert: Victron nails it.
https://w6hs.net/review-victron-energy-smartsolar-50-amp-mppt-solar-charge-controller/
#SolarCharging #Victron #SolarPower #OffGrid #LiFePO4 #Renogy #MPPT
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I take a look at the Victron SmartSolar MPPT charge controller and make some comparisons to the Renogy Rover. Spoiler alert: Victron nails it.
https://w6hs.net/review-victron-energy-smartsolar-50-amp-mppt-solar-charge-controller/
#SolarCharging #Victron #SolarPower #OffGrid #LiFePO4 #Renogy #MPPT
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I take a look at the Victron SmartSolar MPPT charge controller and make some comparisons to the Renogy Rover. Spoiler alert: Victron nails it.
https://w6hs.net/review-victron-energy-smartsolar-50-amp-mppt-solar-charge-controller/
#SolarCharging #Victron #SolarPower #OffGrid #LiFePO4 #Renogy #MPPT
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Save $1,400 on #AnkerSOLIX F3800, the ultimate #powerstation with 3,840Wh capacity and #solarcharging. #Anker
https://gadgetbond.com/anker-solix-f3800-portable-power-station-deal/
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#meshtastic Anyone have a solar panel charging a
18650 battery via a #lilygo T-bat , and the T-bat powering a lilygo T-beam, which also has and charges its own 18650 battery? Does this setup make sense to increase battery capacity available to T-beam when there is no sun? #tbat #tbeam #Chargers #charging #lora #solarcharging
T-bat: https://www.lilygo.cc/products/t-bat
T-beam: https://www.lilygo.cc/products/t-beam-v1-1-esp32-lora-module?variant=42204034990261 -
#meshtastic Anyone have a solar panel charging a
18650 battery via a #lilygo T-bat , and the T-bat powering a lilygo T-beam, which also has and charges its own 18650 battery? Does this setup make sense to increase battery capacity available to T-beam when there is no sun? #tbat #tbeam #Chargers #charging #lora #solarcharging
T-bat: https://www.lilygo.cc/products/t-bat
T-beam: https://www.lilygo.cc/products/t-beam-v1-1-esp32-lora-module?variant=42204034990261 -
#meshtastic Anyone have a solar panel charging a
18650 battery via a #lilygo T-bat , and the T-bat powering a lilygo T-beam, which also has and charges its own 18650 battery? Does this setup make sense to increase battery capacity available to T-beam when there is no sun? #tbat #tbeam #Chargers #charging #lora #solarcharging
T-bat: https://www.lilygo.cc/products/t-bat
T-beam: https://www.lilygo.cc/products/t-beam-v1-1-esp32-lora-module?variant=42204034990261 -
#meshtastic Anyone have a solar panel charging a
18650 battery via a #lilygo T-bat , and the T-bat powering a lilygo T-beam, which also has and charges its own 18650 battery? Does this setup make sense to increase battery capacity available to T-beam when there is no sun? #tbat #tbeam #Chargers #charging #lora #solarcharging
T-bat: https://www.lilygo.cc/products/t-bat
T-beam: https://www.lilygo.cc/products/t-beam-v1-1-esp32-lora-module?variant=42204034990261 -
#meshtastic Anyone have a solar panel charging a
18650 battery via a #lilygo T-bat , and the T-bat powering a lilygo T-beam, which also has and charges its own 18650 battery? Does this setup make sense to increase battery capacity available to T-beam when there is no sun? #tbat #tbeam #Chargers #charging #lora #solarcharging
T-bat: https://www.lilygo.cc/products/t-bat
T-beam: https://www.lilygo.cc/products/t-beam-v1-1-esp32-lora-module?variant=42204034990261 -
Lenovo Mechanical Energy Harvesting keyboard & mouse concept never needs to be plugged in
Lenovo is showing off a concept wireless keyboard & mouse set at CES 2024 that never needs to be plugged in to charge.
That’s because the Mechanical Energy Harvesting Combo system “uses mechanical movement and solar irradiation” to generate enough power to keep the peripherals running.We’ve seen mobile gadgets with solar […]
https://liliputing.com/?p=165547
#ces2024 #concept #lenovo #mechanicalEnergyHarvestingCombo #mechanicalPower #solarCharging
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Yesterday just as I was telling the Garmin Instinct to start tracking I noticed that I had 20 or less percent of battery left so I considered turning around, to swap to another device. I didn’t, and I just went for a 12km walk. During the walk I was more focused on keeping the watch face facing into the sun, to keep the sun powering the watch and it worked.
I really expected the watch to die. I had about 20 percent battery and that is what is used during a usual walk. I think that the strong sun, as well as me actively trying to keep my wrist facing into the sun helped give the watch enough power not to die.
First time
Usually I always keep my devices charged. As soon as I see them dip to 30 percent I usually charge them. In this case though, I didn’t, so I really depended on the sun to keep the device powered, and it worked.
The Alternate Plan
The alternative that I considered was to take off the watch, strap it to the back and have it count steps, rather than track the activity with the GPS and more. I know that in this mode the battery can last for weeks, when the sun is shining, as it is doing at the moment. With Solar watches, in theory, you never need to charge, them, especially if you use them as a step counter and nothing else.
Just Enough Power
I believe that the watch, with the sun we had yesterday, generates just enough power to keep itself running whilst tracking, with little left over, if anything for actual charging. It went from eight hours down to three hours but I suspect it would have died, if the weather had been overcast and if I had not kept the watch facing the sun.
I don’t recommend letting the battery get so low, I just carried out an experiment, since the opportunity presented itself. I was also tracking with the Apple watch on the other wrist so I would not have lost the track. It would just have taken more effort to keep things up to date.
And Finally
I need to get back to doing more interesting things. I’m walking around in circles, so although I track everything I do, it isn’t interesting to look at on a map, because these are walks I do regularly.
Share this:- Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
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#garmin #garmin-instinct #low-battery #solar-charging #solar-powered
https://www.main-vision.com/richard/blog/garmin-instinct-solar-low-battery/
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Yesterday just as I was telling the Garmin Instinct to start tracking I noticed that I had 20 or less percent of battery left so I considered turning around, to swap to another device. I didn’t, and I just went for a 12km walk. During the walk I was more focused on keeping the watch face facing into the sun, to keep the sun powering the watch and it worked.
I really expected the watch to die. I had about 20 percent battery and that is what is used during a usual walk. I think that the strong sun, as well as me actively trying to keep my wrist facing into the sun helped give the watch enough power not to die.
First time
Usually I always keep my devices charged. As soon as I see them dip to 30 percent I usually charge them. In this case though, I didn’t, so I really depended on the sun to keep the device powered, and it worked.
The Alternate Plan
The alternative that I considered was to take off the watch, strap it to the back and have it count steps, rather than track the activity with the GPS and more. I know that in this mode the battery can last for weeks, when the sun is shining, as it is doing at the moment. With Solar watches, in theory, you never need to charge, them, especially if you use them as a step counter and nothing else.
Just Enough Power
I believe that the watch, with the sun we had yesterday, generates just enough power to keep itself running whilst tracking, with little left over, if anything for actual charging. It went from eight hours down to three hours but I suspect it would have died, if the weather had been overcast and if I had not kept the watch facing the sun.
I don’t recommend letting the battery get so low, I just carried out an experiment, since the opportunity presented itself. I was also tracking with the Apple watch on the other wrist so I would not have lost the track. It would just have taken more effort to keep things up to date.
And Finally
I need to get back to doing more interesting things. I’m walking around in circles, so although I track everything I do, it isn’t interesting to look at on a map, because these are walks I do regularly.
Share this:- Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
- Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
- Click to share on Pocket (Opens in new window)
#garmin #garmin-instinct #low-battery #solar-charging #solar-powered
https://www.main-vision.com/richard/blog/garmin-instinct-solar-low-battery/
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Yesterday just as I was telling the Garmin Instinct to start tracking I noticed that I had 20 or less percent of battery left so I considered turning around, to swap to another device. I didn’t, and I just went for a 12km walk. During the walk I was more focused on keeping the watch face facing into the sun, to keep the sun powering the watch and it worked.
I really expected the watch to die. I had about 20 percent battery and that is what is used during a usual walk. I think that the strong sun, as well as me actively trying to keep my wrist facing into the sun helped give the watch enough power not to die.
First time
Usually I always keep my devices charged. As soon as I see them dip to 30 percent I usually charge them. In this case though, I didn’t, so I really depended on the sun to keep the device powered, and it worked.
The Alternate Plan
The alternative that I considered was to take off the watch, strap it to the back and have it count steps, rather than track the activity with the GPS and more. I know that in this mode the battery can last for weeks, when the sun is shining, as it is doing at the moment. With Solar watches, in theory, you never need to charge, them, especially if you use them as a step counter and nothing else.
Just Enough Power
I believe that the watch, with the sun we had yesterday, generates just enough power to keep itself running whilst tracking, with little left over, if anything for actual charging. It went from eight hours down to three hours but I suspect it would have died, if the weather had been overcast and if I had not kept the watch facing the sun.
I don’t recommend letting the battery get so low, I just carried out an experiment, since the opportunity presented itself. I was also tracking with the Apple watch on the other wrist so I would not have lost the track. It would just have taken more effort to keep things up to date.
And Finally
I need to get back to doing more interesting things. I’m walking around in circles, so although I track everything I do, it isn’t interesting to look at on a map, because these are walks I do regularly.
#garmin #garmin-instinct #low-battery #solar-charging #solar-powered
https://www.main-vision.com/richard/blog/garmin-instinct-solar-low-battery/
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Yesterday just as I was telling the Garmin Instinct to start tracking I noticed that I had 20 or less percent of battery left so I considered turning around, to swap to another device. I didn’t, and I just went for a 12km walk. During the walk I was more focused on keeping the watch face facing into the sun, to keep the sun powering the watch and it worked.
I really expected the watch to die. I had about 20 percent battery and that is what is used during a usual walk. I think that the strong sun, as well as me actively trying to keep my wrist facing into the sun helped give the watch enough power not to die.
First time
Usually I always keep my devices charged. As soon as I see them dip to 30 percent I usually charge them. In this case though, I didn’t, so I really depended on the sun to keep the device powered, and it worked.
The Alternate Plan
The alternative that I considered was to take off the watch, strap it to the back and have it count steps, rather than track the activity with the GPS and more. I know that in this mode the battery can last for weeks, when the sun is shining, as it is doing at the moment. With Solar watches, in theory, you never need to charge, them, especially if you use them as a step counter and nothing else.
Just Enough Power
I believe that the watch, with the sun we had yesterday, generates just enough power to keep itself running whilst tracking, with little left over, if anything for actual charging. It went from eight hours down to three hours but I suspect it would have died, if the weather had been overcast and if I had not kept the watch facing the sun.
I don’t recommend letting the battery get so low, I just carried out an experiment, since the opportunity presented itself. I was also tracking with the Apple watch on the other wrist so I would not have lost the track. It would just have taken more effort to keep things up to date.
And Finally
I need to get back to doing more interesting things. I’m walking around in circles, so although I track everything I do, it isn’t interesting to look at on a map, because these are walks I do regularly.
#garmin #garmin-instinct #low-battery #solar-charging #solar-powered
https://www.main-vision.com/richard/blog/garmin-instinct-solar-low-battery/
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Wahrlich ultraleichte Solarmodule sind schwer zu finden, deshalb habe ich die Recherche dazu in meinem Blog geteilt, viel Spaß beim Lesen. - Truly ultralight solar panels are hard to find, so I've shared the research on them in my blog, enjoy reading.
https://rundeaugen.wordpress.com/2023/05/31/unerwunschte-ultraleichte-solarpaneele/
#ultraleicht #ultralight #solar #solarpaneel #Solarladen #solarcharging #trekking #wandern #ultralighthiking -
Wahrlich ultraleichte Solarmodule sind schwer zu finden, deshalb habe ich die Recherche dazu in meinem Blog geteilt, viel Spaß beim Lesen. - Truly ultralight solar panels are hard to find, so I've shared the research on them in my blog, enjoy reading.
https://rundeaugen.wordpress.com/2023/05/31/unerwunschte-ultraleichte-solarpaneele/
#ultraleicht #ultralight #solar #solarpaneel #Solarladen #solarcharging #trekking #wandern #ultralighthiking -
It’s a sunny day. Nice to see the solar charging rising in our community data ☀️
#summeriscoming #community #solarchargingSee the live data in our UI or at https://evcc.io