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Got Sun? Go Solar! by Rex Ewing and Doug Pratt. Everything you need to know about grid-tying a renewable energy system. Order it from our Online Store HERE. |
Power With Nature by Rex Ewing. A great introduction to renewable energy. Friendly and easy to read, but with all the technical details you'll need to get started. Order it from our Online Store HERE. |

| The links here take you directly to Amazon.com for ordering these books. By clicking from here, you give us a bit of a boost so we can keep providing free renewable energy information on our website. These books are hand-selected by us as being top-of-the-line, recommended reading. | |
| Here's a great book on heating with solar power, by a friend of ours and well-known author Dan Chiras PhD. | An excellent and very detailed book on buying, designing and installing renewable energy systems of all kinds, also by Dan Chiras PhD. |
| The "For Dummies" series of books is well known for the friendly style and thorough coverage of the topic. This one, as usual, assumes you have ZERO knowledge of solar energy and are wondering how to figure out if sticking solar panels on your roof is worth the investment. And what the heck to do next if the answer is 'yes'! Highly recommended. | This awesome, inexpensive kilowatt-hour meter plugs into your wall outlet, then you plug the 120 VAC appliance you want to measure the energy usage of right into the unit. |
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First, your electricity is produced by solar
panels, wind generators,
hydro generators, and/or a gasoline
generator. This electricity is usually in the form of 12
volt direct current (12 VDC). Some gasoline generators produce 120
volt alternating current (120 VAC), and require a battery
charger to convert this to 12 VDC.
Below is a diagram of a sample power system:
This page is still in progress...we have LOTS of information to add!
Example System Diagram
Your electricity then flows to your batteries
through a charge controller, with a meter
in the line to tell you what's happening with the system. The charge
controller shuts off the charging current when your batteries are full.
When you run 12 VDC lights or appliances, the current
flows from your batteries, through a meter and fuse box to your appliance.
Devices that run off of 120 VAC take their power from an inverter, which
converts the 12 VDC to 120 VAC. Inverters are availble that can power
your whole house through regular AC wall outlets, or in small versions
that can run only one device at time.

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©2001 by FORCEFIELD
