<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<rss version="2.0" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"  xmlns:isc="http://dtd.interspire.com/rss/isc-1.0.dtd">
	<channel>
		<title><![CDATA[Mr. Solar®: Latest News]]></title>
		<link>https://www.mrsolar.com</link>
		<description><![CDATA[The latest news from Mr. Solar®.]]></description>
		<pubDate>Tue, 28 Apr 2026 21:25:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<isc:store_title><![CDATA[Mr. Solar®]]></isc:store_title>
		<item>
			<title><![CDATA[Avoiding Hidden Dangers – Maintain Your Solar Panels Properly]]></title>
			<link>https://www.mrsolar.com/powerswitch/avoiding-hidden-dangers-maintain-your-solar-panels-properly/</link>
			<pubDate>Thu, 13 Apr 2017 13:21:20 +0000</pubDate>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.mrsolar.com/powerswitch/avoiding-hidden-dangers-maintain-your-solar-panels-properly/</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[<p>
	Although
solar energy is a sustainable power source, it doesn't mean your
equipment will last forever.  Once installed, there are many things
that can go wrong.  This makes it necessary to perform some
maintenance routines to make sure it is working optimally for a long
time to come.  Here is a look at some common issues with solar panels
and what you can do in order to prolong the life of your valuable
investment.</p><h2>How to Maintain
your Solar Panels Properly to Avoid Some Hidden Issues
</h2><p>
	Once
you have bought and finally installed your solar panel, your first
concern is probably the kind of issues your system could face.  This
is natural
since you want your investment to serve you properly for as long as
possible.  What are the most common issues? What parts usually break
first?  How do I make sure they don't break?  Such could be the
questions running through your mind.</p><p>
	Fortunately,
photovoltaic modules can last a very long time. According to an
	<u><a href="http://www.engineering.com/ElectronicsDesign/ElectronicsDesignArticles/ArticleID/7475/What-Is-the-Lifespan-of-a-Solar-Panel.aspx">analysis</a></u>
	done in 2014 by National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL),
photovoltaic panels made after 2000, which use monocrystalline
silicon, have a yearly degradation rate of less than 0.4%. This
means, your panel should have an efficiency of 92 percent after 20
years of service.  Indeed, solar panels installed today are expected
to last well beyond that at 80% efficiency.</p><p>
	Additionally,
solar panels do not require costly maintenance. Since they are
designed to work outdoors, their structure can withstand harsh
weather and punishing sunlight and heat. Nevertheless, there are
still some precautions to take and maintenance routines that will
ensure your system works as desired during its long lifetime.</p><h3>Avoid choosing an inappropriate location
	before your panels are installed
	</h3><p>
	For the
solar panels to produce enough power, they require full, bright
sunlight. Shadow and prolonged cloudy weather are among the issues
that will affect their performance. Lack of bright sunlight reduces
the rate of voltage output. To ensure maximum production from the
modules, install the panels on mounts angled towards the sun.</p><p>
	It will
also be necessary to do some adjustment on a seasonal basis. This is
because the sun’s inclination can change throughout the year.
Besides, trees grow or people erect tall buildings that could block
the sun’s rays. Always monitor these changes and make necessary
adjustments to ensure your installation receives enough exposure to
the sun.</p><h3>Inspect regularly to unearth any wiring
	problems
	</h3><p>
	Wiring
problems are the most common with solar panels. It is always a good
practice to examine the connections in your system on a regular
basis. Check loose connections, corrosion,
and oxidation of the wires as these issues could affect the
performance
of your renewable energy source.</p><p>
	For
instance, loose wires become worse during very hot days and they can
fail to transmit energy completely. On the other hand, corrosion
increases the resistance
of wires making them poor conductors of electricity. Tighten any
loose connections and replace those which are already oxidized so
that your installation can produce the optimum
amount of energy.</p><h3>Make sure the panels are clean</h3><p>
	Fortunately,
rainfall does help in getting your solar panels clean. A lot of
pollen, leaves, dust and any other loose debris are washed off during
rains. However, when dirt accumulates during dry seasons, you may
have to clean it. Such dirt can prevent enough sunlight from hitting
the surface of the panels. This causes the power produced by your
installation to reduce.</p><p>
	In this
case, a simple act such as directing a hose pipe to the plate will
clear of such dirt just like rainwater. However, some dirt and grime
stick hard calling for some wiping. Solar panels are made of glass,
and it is possible to clean them with water and soap. However, you
cannot use an abrasive material or allow any soap residue to remain
on the surface.</p><p>
	The
residue coats the panel hindering sun
rays from reaching it. On the other hand,
abrasion can cause scratches that will reflect sun rays. All these
reduce the efficiency of your solar system. Make sure you 
	<strong>do
not wash the panels during extremely hot days
	</strong>
	as the glass can shatter.
Cracks on the plate’s surface lower
its efficiency.</p><h2>What parts will break
first?
</h2><p>
	Inverters
are among the 
	<u><a href="http://www.mrsolar.com/balance-of-system/">balance
of system
	</a></u> components that will
fall first. Most inverters in the market today have a useful life of
fifteen to twenty years. You should keep proper installation records
that can show the expected replacement time. You can hardly control
their malfunction after the lapse of their useful life. Proper
maintenance, though, will ensure that they serve as per the
expectations.</p><p>
	Proper
handling can lengthen the 
	<u><a href="https://www.proudgreenhome.com/news/what-to-expect-after-getting-solar-panels-installed/">life
expectancy
	</a></u> of your photovoltaic
module. Ensure it has a good frame that will protect it from breaking
in case of accidental falling during installation. It should also be
installed in a place free from falling objects.</p><p><strong>About the Author:</strong> Adam Hammill - President/CEO of <a href="http://alivesolar.com" target="_blank">ALIVE SOLAR</a> After 11 years researching alternative energy, he 
discovered a way of combining existing technologies to create a clean, 
chemical energy storage system at least twice as efficient as systems 
currently available. Adam's ideas, experience, and
 relationships have quickly caused Alive Solar to thrive in the 
alternative energy arena in Southern California. He earned a Bachelor of
 Science degree at the University of Southern California and a Master of
 Theology degree from the University of Aberdeen
 in Scotland.</p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
	Although
solar energy is a sustainable power source, it doesn't mean your
equipment will last forever.  Once installed, there are many things
that can go wrong.  This makes it necessary to perform some
maintenance routines to make sure it is working optimally for a long
time to come.  Here is a look at some common issues with solar panels
and what you can do in order to prolong the life of your valuable
investment.</p><h2>How to Maintain
your Solar Panels Properly to Avoid Some Hidden Issues
</h2><p>
	Once
you have bought and finally installed your solar panel, your first
concern is probably the kind of issues your system could face.  This
is natural
since you want your investment to serve you properly for as long as
possible.  What are the most common issues? What parts usually break
first?  How do I make sure they don't break?  Such could be the
questions running through your mind.</p><p>
	Fortunately,
photovoltaic modules can last a very long time. According to an
	<u><a href="http://www.engineering.com/ElectronicsDesign/ElectronicsDesignArticles/ArticleID/7475/What-Is-the-Lifespan-of-a-Solar-Panel.aspx">analysis</a></u>
	done in 2014 by National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL),
photovoltaic panels made after 2000, which use monocrystalline
silicon, have a yearly degradation rate of less than 0.4%. This
means, your panel should have an efficiency of 92 percent after 20
years of service.  Indeed, solar panels installed today are expected
to last well beyond that at 80% efficiency.</p><p>
	Additionally,
solar panels do not require costly maintenance. Since they are
designed to work outdoors, their structure can withstand harsh
weather and punishing sunlight and heat. Nevertheless, there are
still some precautions to take and maintenance routines that will
ensure your system works as desired during its long lifetime.</p><h3>Avoid choosing an inappropriate location
	before your panels are installed
	</h3><p>
	For the
solar panels to produce enough power, they require full, bright
sunlight. Shadow and prolonged cloudy weather are among the issues
that will affect their performance. Lack of bright sunlight reduces
the rate of voltage output. To ensure maximum production from the
modules, install the panels on mounts angled towards the sun.</p><p>
	It will
also be necessary to do some adjustment on a seasonal basis. This is
because the sun’s inclination can change throughout the year.
Besides, trees grow or people erect tall buildings that could block
the sun’s rays. Always monitor these changes and make necessary
adjustments to ensure your installation receives enough exposure to
the sun.</p><h3>Inspect regularly to unearth any wiring
	problems
	</h3><p>
	Wiring
problems are the most common with solar panels. It is always a good
practice to examine the connections in your system on a regular
basis. Check loose connections, corrosion,
and oxidation of the wires as these issues could affect the
performance
of your renewable energy source.</p><p>
	For
instance, loose wires become worse during very hot days and they can
fail to transmit energy completely. On the other hand, corrosion
increases the resistance
of wires making them poor conductors of electricity. Tighten any
loose connections and replace those which are already oxidized so
that your installation can produce the optimum
amount of energy.</p><h3>Make sure the panels are clean</h3><p>
	Fortunately,
rainfall does help in getting your solar panels clean. A lot of
pollen, leaves, dust and any other loose debris are washed off during
rains. However, when dirt accumulates during dry seasons, you may
have to clean it. Such dirt can prevent enough sunlight from hitting
the surface of the panels. This causes the power produced by your
installation to reduce.</p><p>
	In this
case, a simple act such as directing a hose pipe to the plate will
clear of such dirt just like rainwater. However, some dirt and grime
stick hard calling for some wiping. Solar panels are made of glass,
and it is possible to clean them with water and soap. However, you
cannot use an abrasive material or allow any soap residue to remain
on the surface.</p><p>
	The
residue coats the panel hindering sun
rays from reaching it. On the other hand,
abrasion can cause scratches that will reflect sun rays. All these
reduce the efficiency of your solar system. Make sure you 
	<strong>do
not wash the panels during extremely hot days
	</strong>
	as the glass can shatter.
Cracks on the plate’s surface lower
its efficiency.</p><h2>What parts will break
first?
</h2><p>
	Inverters
are among the 
	<u><a href="http://www.mrsolar.com/balance-of-system/">balance
of system
	</a></u> components that will
fall first. Most inverters in the market today have a useful life of
fifteen to twenty years. You should keep proper installation records
that can show the expected replacement time. You can hardly control
their malfunction after the lapse of their useful life. Proper
maintenance, though, will ensure that they serve as per the
expectations.</p><p>
	Proper
handling can lengthen the 
	<u><a href="https://www.proudgreenhome.com/news/what-to-expect-after-getting-solar-panels-installed/">life
expectancy
	</a></u> of your photovoltaic
module. Ensure it has a good frame that will protect it from breaking
in case of accidental falling during installation. It should also be
installed in a place free from falling objects.</p><p><strong>About the Author:</strong> Adam Hammill - President/CEO of <a href="http://alivesolar.com" target="_blank">ALIVE SOLAR</a> After 11 years researching alternative energy, he 
discovered a way of combining existing technologies to create a clean, 
chemical energy storage system at least twice as efficient as systems 
currently available. Adam's ideas, experience, and
 relationships have quickly caused Alive Solar to thrive in the 
alternative energy arena in Southern California. He earned a Bachelor of
 Science degree at the University of Southern California and a Master of
 Theology degree from the University of Aberdeen
 in Scotland.</p>]]></content:encoded>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title><![CDATA[Beer, Courtesy Of The Sun...]]></title>
			<link>https://www.mrsolar.com/powerswitch/beer-courtesy-of-the-sun/</link>
			<pubDate>Fri, 07 Apr 2017 12:42:09 +0000</pubDate>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.mrsolar.com/powerswitch/beer-courtesy-of-the-sun/</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[<p>
	Today is National Beer Day ( 
	<a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/NationalBeerDay?src=tren" target="_blank">#NationalBeerDay</a> ) and for many breweries across the world light from the sun provides electrical energy that is used to make some of our favorite beers.&nbsp; Though many breweries in the United States take advantage of the benefits of clean sunlight and of government subsidies designed to help stimulate growth in the use of solar energy to power our home and businesses, the top honor for implementation of solar in its breweries as of 2016 goes to...</p><p>
	<a href="http://www.theheinekencompany.com/" target="_blank">The Heineken Company</a>!&nbsp;</p><p>
	In November 2016 Heineken conducted a massive upgrade on the rooftop solar
 project at their brewery in Massafra, Italy.&nbsp; That facility, which now sports 13,000 
solar panels, now boasts a total capacity of 4.5MW, making this the largest solar PV project installed on a beer brewery anywhere in the world.</p><p>
	So, if you enjoy your beer and are also conscientious about clean energy, clean air, and a healthy climate, grab yourself an ice-cold Heineken and enjoy it knowing that the company behind it values the importance of reducing their environmental and climate impact.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p><p>
	Though 
	<a href="http://www.theheinekencompany.com/sustainability" target="_blank">Heineken is a leader in sustainability</a> and in taking responsibility for their impact on the planet, they are not the only beer brewers who are turning to renewable sources of energy to bring us their beers.&nbsp; Check out this article from <a href="http://www.solarplaza.com/channels/" target="_blank">SolarPlaza.com</a> entitled: <a href="http://www.solarplaza.com/channels/top-10s/11397/top-40-solar-beer-breweries/">Top 50 Solar Beer Breweries</a>.</p><p>
	
<iframe src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/xSGrQahNLs8" allowfullscreen="" frameborder="0" height="315" width="560">
	</iframe></p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
	Today is National Beer Day ( 
	<a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/NationalBeerDay?src=tren" target="_blank">#NationalBeerDay</a> ) and for many breweries across the world light from the sun provides electrical energy that is used to make some of our favorite beers.&nbsp; Though many breweries in the United States take advantage of the benefits of clean sunlight and of government subsidies designed to help stimulate growth in the use of solar energy to power our home and businesses, the top honor for implementation of solar in its breweries as of 2016 goes to...</p><p>
	<a href="http://www.theheinekencompany.com/" target="_blank">The Heineken Company</a>!&nbsp;</p><p>
	In November 2016 Heineken conducted a massive upgrade on the rooftop solar
 project at their brewery in Massafra, Italy.&nbsp; That facility, which now sports 13,000 
solar panels, now boasts a total capacity of 4.5MW, making this the largest solar PV project installed on a beer brewery anywhere in the world.</p><p>
	So, if you enjoy your beer and are also conscientious about clean energy, clean air, and a healthy climate, grab yourself an ice-cold Heineken and enjoy it knowing that the company behind it values the importance of reducing their environmental and climate impact.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p><p>
	Though 
	<a href="http://www.theheinekencompany.com/sustainability" target="_blank">Heineken is a leader in sustainability</a> and in taking responsibility for their impact on the planet, they are not the only beer brewers who are turning to renewable sources of energy to bring us their beers.&nbsp; Check out this article from <a href="http://www.solarplaza.com/channels/" target="_blank">SolarPlaza.com</a> entitled: <a href="http://www.solarplaza.com/channels/top-10s/11397/top-40-solar-beer-breweries/">Top 50 Solar Beer Breweries</a>.</p><p>
	
<iframe src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/xSGrQahNLs8" allowfullscreen="" frameborder="0" height="315" width="560">
	</iframe></p>]]></content:encoded>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title><![CDATA[Can Going Solar Help Your Business Succeed? ]]></title>
			<link>https://www.mrsolar.com/powerswitch/can-going-solar-help-your-business-succeed/</link>
			<pubDate>Wed, 08 Mar 2017 15:48:42 +0000</pubDate>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.mrsolar.com/powerswitch/can-going-solar-help-your-business-succeed/</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[<p>Businesses have faced many challenges in the years since the Great Recession, a stormy time of economic crisis that necessitated a tightening of belts and fostered a general uncertainty about the future. The decision to make large investments in their businesses were postponed for years while business owners waited for the clouds to clear and the waters to calm. During the latter part of those intervening years, though, a curious thing happened: the cost of solar power came down. There are several factors that contributed to the lower cost of solar, but I'll direct you to this article from SEIA about <a href="http://www.seia.org/research-resources/solar-industry-data" target="_blank">recent growth in the solar industry in the United States</a>. Needless to say, this is an exciting development!</p><p>The cost of going solar has decreased substantially over the past few 
years, making solar an increasingly attractive solution for businesses 
who are seeking to reduce their overhead costs over the long term in 
order to experience greater profitability while reducing their carbon 
footprint.&nbsp; The installation of a solar electric generating station for your business is a known factor in the valuation of your business, increasing the value of your business to creditors and a perhaps a future buyer.</p><p>
	<img class="__mce_add_custom__" src="https://cdn3.bigcommerce.com/s-z25w13u/product_images/uploaded_images/solar-tax-incentive-example.png?t=1448307371" alt="Example of solar system cost when factoring in the U.S. 30% federal tax credit" style="float: left; margin: 0px 10px 10px 0px;" width="540" height="150"></p><p>
	Fortunately, the economy has slowly grown and recovered in the years since the Great Recession subsided.&nbsp; The stock markets are soaring (as of this writing) and business owners are feeling much more confident that investments in their businesses are beginning to become more feasible and, for those who may have entertained the thought of going solar, there's no better time in years than now to take advantage of historically low costs, rebates, and incentives that make solar a viable energy strategy for business owners and offer the promise of substantially reducing or completely eliminating your electric bill.</p><p>
	 Solar energy now has the potential to come in at a cost that will allow business owners the opportunity of reducing or eliminating their monthly electric bill and at some point in the future, owning an electric generating facility that will continue to produce power for years after it pays for itself. With solar, businesses are now to offset future costs by hedging against future utility price increases. That is a clear, positive return on investment that will go right to the bottom line.</p><h2>Solar Brings Benefits</h2><p>
	Once a solar power system is installed, there is little overhead cost on the front end.&nbsp; Depending on what percentage of a business' electric bill the solar system is designed to displace from the grid, solar can reduce expenses in a significant way and can potentially eliminate all of a 
business’s electric bill. Granting the up-front cost, removing a monthly cost of doing business not only makes paying the bills each month easier, the system will be working towards paying itself off.&nbsp; Pay off times vary too much to say how that will take here in this article, but before you sign the dotted line, you will have a very good estimation how long it will take for the system to pay for itself.&nbsp; But, once it does, your solar power system will, with warranties and expected life of system components and nominal maintenance and care, continue to produce power that is essentially free for years thereafter.</p><h2>Solar Can Reduce Tax Obligation</h2><p><a href="http://www.mrsolar.com/solar-investment-tax-credit/" target="_blank"><img src="/product_images/uploaded_images/federal-tax-credit-350.png" alt="The U.S. provides for a 30% Investment Tax Credit on most renewable energy installations.  Learn more..." style="float: right; margin: 0px 0px 10px 10px;"></a></p><p>One of the most important considerations when researching the possibility of taking your business solar is the tax implications.&nbsp; Many states and local governments, as well as electric utility companies, have various ways to provide incentives to home and business owners to encourage the growth of solar power.&nbsp; However, nearly all solar and renewable energy projects in the United States are eligible for 
	<a href="http://www.mrsolar.com/solar-investment-tax-credit/">a 30% Investment tax credit</a> currently offered by the federal government. Here's how it works:</p><p>
	When you install a solar power system for your business, for every dollar you spend on that project you will receive $0.30 of credit toward any taxes you owe when you file at the end of the year.&nbsp; Businesses that owe less tax than what the credit covers can expect to be able to apply the balance of their credit to the following year's filing, either carrying back one year or carrying forward up to 20 years.&nbsp; Businesses may also opt to take the credit on quarterly filings to reduce quarterly tax commitments. Finally, business owners can experience additional savings by claiming system depreciation over a 5 year period.</p><h2>Solar Is A Great Investment</h2><p>
	As with any investment, the return needs to justify the cost. Pre-tax
 returns for most solar projects in the Northeast US can range from 5% 
to 25% with paybacks typically ranging from 3 – 10 years. A payback can 
be also viewed as the “end date” to an electric bill, as all electricity
 after the system is paid back is free electricity.</p><h2>What About Maintenance?</h2><p>
	The great thing about owning a solar power system is that maintenance is very easy.&nbsp; Solar has no moving parts so there is no premature wearing of system components.&nbsp; Many system owners will go years before they see any significant maintenance costs. The industry standard estimate of maintenance costs after 10 years is calculated to be around 2 pennies per kilowatt hour (kWh). Older solar power systems may continue working properly beyond 10 years but the primary concern will be the inverter.&nbsp; The solar panels that form the system array, though, will continue to operate for 25-40 years with little need for maintenance, unless the system is damaged in some way.</p><h2>Yes, Solar Can Help Your Business Succeed!</h2><p>
	If you're a business owner who is looking to hedge the future cost of energy while reducing or eliminating your monthly electric bill and reducing your carbon footprint, then should consider going solar.&nbsp; Solar energy can provide your business with a long term strategy to reduce costs, increase the value of your business, and eventually producing years of free and clear, clean, renewable solar electricity for your business, adding profits to your bottom line and helping your business succeed!</p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Businesses have faced many challenges in the years since the Great Recession, a stormy time of economic crisis that necessitated a tightening of belts and fostered a general uncertainty about the future. The decision to make large investments in their businesses were postponed for years while business owners waited for the clouds to clear and the waters to calm. During the latter part of those intervening years, though, a curious thing happened: the cost of solar power came down. There are several factors that contributed to the lower cost of solar, but I'll direct you to this article from SEIA about <a href="http://www.seia.org/research-resources/solar-industry-data" target="_blank">recent growth in the solar industry in the United States</a>. Needless to say, this is an exciting development!</p><p>The cost of going solar has decreased substantially over the past few 
years, making solar an increasingly attractive solution for businesses 
who are seeking to reduce their overhead costs over the long term in 
order to experience greater profitability while reducing their carbon 
footprint.&nbsp; The installation of a solar electric generating station for your business is a known factor in the valuation of your business, increasing the value of your business to creditors and a perhaps a future buyer.</p><p>
	<img class="__mce_add_custom__" src="https://cdn3.bigcommerce.com/s-z25w13u/product_images/uploaded_images/solar-tax-incentive-example.png?t=1448307371" alt="Example of solar system cost when factoring in the U.S. 30% federal tax credit" style="float: left; margin: 0px 10px 10px 0px;" width="540" height="150"></p><p>
	Fortunately, the economy has slowly grown and recovered in the years since the Great Recession subsided.&nbsp; The stock markets are soaring (as of this writing) and business owners are feeling much more confident that investments in their businesses are beginning to become more feasible and, for those who may have entertained the thought of going solar, there's no better time in years than now to take advantage of historically low costs, rebates, and incentives that make solar a viable energy strategy for business owners and offer the promise of substantially reducing or completely eliminating your electric bill.</p><p>
	 Solar energy now has the potential to come in at a cost that will allow business owners the opportunity of reducing or eliminating their monthly electric bill and at some point in the future, owning an electric generating facility that will continue to produce power for years after it pays for itself. With solar, businesses are now to offset future costs by hedging against future utility price increases. That is a clear, positive return on investment that will go right to the bottom line.</p><h2>Solar Brings Benefits</h2><p>
	Once a solar power system is installed, there is little overhead cost on the front end.&nbsp; Depending on what percentage of a business' electric bill the solar system is designed to displace from the grid, solar can reduce expenses in a significant way and can potentially eliminate all of a 
business’s electric bill. Granting the up-front cost, removing a monthly cost of doing business not only makes paying the bills each month easier, the system will be working towards paying itself off.&nbsp; Pay off times vary too much to say how that will take here in this article, but before you sign the dotted line, you will have a very good estimation how long it will take for the system to pay for itself.&nbsp; But, once it does, your solar power system will, with warranties and expected life of system components and nominal maintenance and care, continue to produce power that is essentially free for years thereafter.</p><h2>Solar Can Reduce Tax Obligation</h2><p><a href="http://www.mrsolar.com/solar-investment-tax-credit/" target="_blank"><img src="/product_images/uploaded_images/federal-tax-credit-350.png" alt="The U.S. provides for a 30% Investment Tax Credit on most renewable energy installations.  Learn more..." style="float: right; margin: 0px 0px 10px 10px;"></a></p><p>One of the most important considerations when researching the possibility of taking your business solar is the tax implications.&nbsp; Many states and local governments, as well as electric utility companies, have various ways to provide incentives to home and business owners to encourage the growth of solar power.&nbsp; However, nearly all solar and renewable energy projects in the United States are eligible for 
	<a href="http://www.mrsolar.com/solar-investment-tax-credit/">a 30% Investment tax credit</a> currently offered by the federal government. Here's how it works:</p><p>
	When you install a solar power system for your business, for every dollar you spend on that project you will receive $0.30 of credit toward any taxes you owe when you file at the end of the year.&nbsp; Businesses that owe less tax than what the credit covers can expect to be able to apply the balance of their credit to the following year's filing, either carrying back one year or carrying forward up to 20 years.&nbsp; Businesses may also opt to take the credit on quarterly filings to reduce quarterly tax commitments. Finally, business owners can experience additional savings by claiming system depreciation over a 5 year period.</p><h2>Solar Is A Great Investment</h2><p>
	As with any investment, the return needs to justify the cost. Pre-tax
 returns for most solar projects in the Northeast US can range from 5% 
to 25% with paybacks typically ranging from 3 – 10 years. A payback can 
be also viewed as the “end date” to an electric bill, as all electricity
 after the system is paid back is free electricity.</p><h2>What About Maintenance?</h2><p>
	The great thing about owning a solar power system is that maintenance is very easy.&nbsp; Solar has no moving parts so there is no premature wearing of system components.&nbsp; Many system owners will go years before they see any significant maintenance costs. The industry standard estimate of maintenance costs after 10 years is calculated to be around 2 pennies per kilowatt hour (kWh). Older solar power systems may continue working properly beyond 10 years but the primary concern will be the inverter.&nbsp; The solar panels that form the system array, though, will continue to operate for 25-40 years with little need for maintenance, unless the system is damaged in some way.</p><h2>Yes, Solar Can Help Your Business Succeed!</h2><p>
	If you're a business owner who is looking to hedge the future cost of energy while reducing or eliminating your monthly electric bill and reducing your carbon footprint, then should consider going solar.&nbsp; Solar energy can provide your business with a long term strategy to reduce costs, increase the value of your business, and eventually producing years of free and clear, clean, renewable solar electricity for your business, adding profits to your bottom line and helping your business succeed!</p>]]></content:encoded>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title><![CDATA[SEIA and CCSA Publish Community Solar Guide for Consumers]]></title>
			<link>https://www.mrsolar.com/powerswitch/seia-and-ccsa-publish-community-solar-guide-for-consumers/</link>
			<pubDate>Fri, 01 Jul 2016 12:42:40 +0000</pubDate>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.mrsolar.com/powerswitch/seia-and-ccsa-publish-community-solar-guide-for-consumers/</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[<p>
	The 
	<a href="http://www.seia.org">Solar Energy Industry Association (SEIA)</a>, an organization which advocates for growth in the solar energy industry, and the <a href="http://www.communitysolaraccess.org/">Coalition for Community Solar Access (CCSA)</a>, an organization working to expand 
access to clean, local affordable energy nationwide through community 
solar, have published a guide to educate consumers about 
	<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Community_solar_farm" target="_blank" title="What is 'community solar'?">community solar</a>.
</p>
<p>
	In a tweet on the socia media platform 
	<a href="https://www.twitter.com/MrSolarCom">Twitter</a>, SEIA announced the release of the guide entitled <em><a href="http://www.seia.org/sites/default/files/Residential%20Consumer%20Guide%20to%20Community%20Solar%20-%20FINAL.pdf" title="READ:Residential Cosumer Guide to Community Solar">Residential Cosumer Guide to Community Solar</a></em>:
</p>
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en">
	<p dir="ltr" lang="en">
		SEIA & 
		<a href="https://twitter.com/SolarAccess">@solaraccess</a> release a new community <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/solar?src=hash">#solar</a> guide to help educate and empower consumers <a href="https://t.co/EH5C8USZXU">https://t.co/EH5C8USZXU</a>
	</p>
	<p>
		— Solar Industry (@SEIA) 
		<a href="https://twitter.com/SEIA/status/748870139441975296">July 1, 2016</a>
	</p>
	</blockquote>
<p>
	For more information about <a href="http://www.seia.org">SEIA</a>, visit them at <a href="http://www.seia.org">their website</a>.  To learn more about community solar and <a href="http://www.communitysolaraccess.org/">CCSA</a>, check them out <a href="http://www.communitysolaraccess.org/">here</a>.</em>
</p>
<p>
	<em>You can <a href="http://www.seia.org/sites/default/files/Residential%20Consumer%20Guide%20to%20Community%20Solar%20-%20FINAL.pdf" title="READ:Residential Cosumer Guide to Community Solar">read the guide here</a>.
</p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
	The 
	<a href="http://www.seia.org">Solar Energy Industry Association (SEIA)</a>, an organization which advocates for growth in the solar energy industry, and the <a href="http://www.communitysolaraccess.org/">Coalition for Community Solar Access (CCSA)</a>, an organization working to expand 
access to clean, local affordable energy nationwide through community 
solar, have published a guide to educate consumers about 
	<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Community_solar_farm" target="_blank" title="What is 'community solar'?">community solar</a>.
</p>
<p>
	In a tweet on the socia media platform 
	<a href="https://www.twitter.com/MrSolarCom">Twitter</a>, SEIA announced the release of the guide entitled <em><a href="http://www.seia.org/sites/default/files/Residential%20Consumer%20Guide%20to%20Community%20Solar%20-%20FINAL.pdf" title="READ:Residential Cosumer Guide to Community Solar">Residential Cosumer Guide to Community Solar</a></em>:
</p>
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en">
	<p dir="ltr" lang="en">
		SEIA & 
		<a href="https://twitter.com/SolarAccess">@solaraccess</a> release a new community <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/solar?src=hash">#solar</a> guide to help educate and empower consumers <a href="https://t.co/EH5C8USZXU">https://t.co/EH5C8USZXU</a>
	</p>
	<p>
		— Solar Industry (@SEIA) 
		<a href="https://twitter.com/SEIA/status/748870139441975296">July 1, 2016</a>
	</p>
	</blockquote>
<p>
	For more information about <a href="http://www.seia.org">SEIA</a>, visit them at <a href="http://www.seia.org">their website</a>.  To learn more about community solar and <a href="http://www.communitysolaraccess.org/">CCSA</a>, check them out <a href="http://www.communitysolaraccess.org/">here</a>.</em>
</p>
<p>
	<em>You can <a href="http://www.seia.org/sites/default/files/Residential%20Consumer%20Guide%20to%20Community%20Solar%20-%20FINAL.pdf" title="READ:Residential Cosumer Guide to Community Solar">read the guide here</a>.
</p>]]></content:encoded>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title><![CDATA[Is Solar Cooking Really A Thing?]]></title>
			<link>https://www.mrsolar.com/powerswitch/is-solar-cooking-really-a-thing/</link>
			<pubDate>Thu, 11 Feb 2016 02:34:11 +0000</pubDate>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.mrsolar.com/powerswitch/is-solar-cooking-really-a-thing/</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[<p>
	<img class="" style="float: right; width: 320px; margin: 0px 0px 20px 20px;" title="Erik Burton's Solar Oven" onmouseover="this.src='http://www.mrsolar.com/product_images/uploaded_images/erik-burton-solar-oven-chicken-dinner.jpg';" onmouseout="this.src='http://www.mrsolar.com/product_images/uploaded_images/6396200661-bb475bcf3e-z.jpg';" src="http://www.mrsolar.com/product_images/uploaded_images/6396200661-bb475bcf3e-z.jpg" alt="Erik Burton's Solar Oven" height="253" width="320">The sun radiates heat that can be used in a number of ways including concentrated solar thermal systems that generate steam to power a turbine and in solar hot water systems that can provide hot water to homes and swimming pools.&nbsp; Heat radiation can also be used to cook food.&nbsp; To do this, a device that gathers the sun's heat and focuses it into a small area is needed.&nbsp; This device is known as a "solar cooker", or "solar oven".&nbsp; The simplest way to do this is to make a box using any material, add a clear top and enclose the inside with aluminum foil so when the box is directed towards the sun it will become hot.&nbsp; A pot or pan (the darker the better) containing the foor you're cooking can then be placed inside the box to begin cooking.&nbsp; Mirrored surfaces can increase the temperature of your solar oven and can reduce the tiime it takes to cook your food.</p><p>
	To the right is a pic of a nice home-built solar oven that he sometimes uses to cook meals, like the Thanksgiving meal he is preparing in this image.&nbsp; Mouse over or tap the image to see this solar oven from a different angle as Erik uses it to cook a chicken with veggies dinner.</p><p>
	You don't have to build your solar oven to be able to have one. There are several quality brands and models of solar ovens on the consumer retail markets.&nbsp; If building your own solar oven is a step towards solar cooking that you would like to skip, we recommend that you consider purchasing a quaility solar oven because we believe you'll be so happy with solar cooking that you'll be glad you have a product that will deliver many meals to come and stand up to the wear and tear - and can stand the heat of the kitchen!</p><p>
	One such quality solar oven is the <a href="http://www.mrsolar.com/all-american-sun-oven/">All American Sun Oven®</a>, pictured below.&nbsp; Priced at $329, the <a href="http://www.mrsolar.com/all-american-sun-oven/">All American Sun Oven®</a> is a complete solar oven solution that provides everything you need to get started cooking with the sun including a built-in thermometer, collapsible reflectors, spill protection with leveling leg, and a CD featuring hundreds of recipes with pictures.&nbsp; The <a href="http://www.mrsolar.com/all-american-sun-oven/">All American Sun Oven®</a> can reach temperatures of up to 400°.</p><p>
	<a href="http://www.mrsolar.com/all-american-sun-oven/"><img class="" style="float: left; width: 251px; margin: 0px 10px 10px 0px;" title="Sun Oven®" src="http://www.mrsolar.com/product_images/uploaded_images/so-aaso-black-home-510x461.png" alt="Sun Oven®" height="231" width="255"></a>Solar cooking is comparable to cooking in a crock pot and many of the same dishes that can be cooked in a crock pot on your kitchen counter can be cooked in a solar oven.&nbsp; As Erik shows us, he prepared a chicken and vegetable dinner.&nbsp; We have found that cooking with a solar cooker greatly improves the taste of the food. We experimented with potatoes, cooking them four different ways: in our oven, in our pressure cooker, in water and in our solar cooker. The potatoes were all from the same batch and we all agreed that the potatoes had a much earthier taste when prepared in the solar oven than did the other cooking methods.&nbsp; We have also found that other food also seem to taste better when cooked in the solar cooker.</p><p>
	If you're someone who feels secure in knowing that you are prepared in the event of some disaster, such as a tornado, hurricane earthquake, or other event that results in extended power outages, solar ovens can be used to cook and heat food.&nbsp; Many of us will never face such an event, but we're all pretty sure we won't be, just as those who experienced the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina thought they'd never face such an event.&nbsp; But there are other great reasons to own a solar oven and two of those reasons are camping and the other is because they're just plain fun!&nbsp; Take your solar oven camping and while you're off exploring and swimming and canoeing, your solar oven is back at camp quietly and efficiently slow-cooking lunch or supper.&nbsp; But the greatest reason to love solar cooking is because it's fun knowing that you can put some ingredients in a pot or pan and leave it in the sun and come back later and realize that your next meal required no connection to the power grid and required the making of no fires.&nbsp; It's just a neat thing to do!</p><p>
	If you've tried a cooking comaparison with, or cooked with, the sun using a solar oven, please tell us about your experience in the comments below.</p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
	<img class="" style="float: right; width: 320px; margin: 0px 0px 20px 20px;" title="Erik Burton's Solar Oven" onmouseover="this.src='http://www.mrsolar.com/product_images/uploaded_images/erik-burton-solar-oven-chicken-dinner.jpg';" onmouseout="this.src='http://www.mrsolar.com/product_images/uploaded_images/6396200661-bb475bcf3e-z.jpg';" src="http://www.mrsolar.com/product_images/uploaded_images/6396200661-bb475bcf3e-z.jpg" alt="Erik Burton's Solar Oven" height="253" width="320">The sun radiates heat that can be used in a number of ways including concentrated solar thermal systems that generate steam to power a turbine and in solar hot water systems that can provide hot water to homes and swimming pools.&nbsp; Heat radiation can also be used to cook food.&nbsp; To do this, a device that gathers the sun's heat and focuses it into a small area is needed.&nbsp; This device is known as a "solar cooker", or "solar oven".&nbsp; The simplest way to do this is to make a box using any material, add a clear top and enclose the inside with aluminum foil so when the box is directed towards the sun it will become hot.&nbsp; A pot or pan (the darker the better) containing the foor you're cooking can then be placed inside the box to begin cooking.&nbsp; Mirrored surfaces can increase the temperature of your solar oven and can reduce the tiime it takes to cook your food.</p><p>
	To the right is a pic of a nice home-built solar oven that he sometimes uses to cook meals, like the Thanksgiving meal he is preparing in this image.&nbsp; Mouse over or tap the image to see this solar oven from a different angle as Erik uses it to cook a chicken with veggies dinner.</p><p>
	You don't have to build your solar oven to be able to have one. There are several quality brands and models of solar ovens on the consumer retail markets.&nbsp; If building your own solar oven is a step towards solar cooking that you would like to skip, we recommend that you consider purchasing a quaility solar oven because we believe you'll be so happy with solar cooking that you'll be glad you have a product that will deliver many meals to come and stand up to the wear and tear - and can stand the heat of the kitchen!</p><p>
	One such quality solar oven is the <a href="http://www.mrsolar.com/all-american-sun-oven/">All American Sun Oven®</a>, pictured below.&nbsp; Priced at $329, the <a href="http://www.mrsolar.com/all-american-sun-oven/">All American Sun Oven®</a> is a complete solar oven solution that provides everything you need to get started cooking with the sun including a built-in thermometer, collapsible reflectors, spill protection with leveling leg, and a CD featuring hundreds of recipes with pictures.&nbsp; The <a href="http://www.mrsolar.com/all-american-sun-oven/">All American Sun Oven®</a> can reach temperatures of up to 400°.</p><p>
	<a href="http://www.mrsolar.com/all-american-sun-oven/"><img class="" style="float: left; width: 251px; margin: 0px 10px 10px 0px;" title="Sun Oven®" src="http://www.mrsolar.com/product_images/uploaded_images/so-aaso-black-home-510x461.png" alt="Sun Oven®" height="231" width="255"></a>Solar cooking is comparable to cooking in a crock pot and many of the same dishes that can be cooked in a crock pot on your kitchen counter can be cooked in a solar oven.&nbsp; As Erik shows us, he prepared a chicken and vegetable dinner.&nbsp; We have found that cooking with a solar cooker greatly improves the taste of the food. We experimented with potatoes, cooking them four different ways: in our oven, in our pressure cooker, in water and in our solar cooker. The potatoes were all from the same batch and we all agreed that the potatoes had a much earthier taste when prepared in the solar oven than did the other cooking methods.&nbsp; We have also found that other food also seem to taste better when cooked in the solar cooker.</p><p>
	If you're someone who feels secure in knowing that you are prepared in the event of some disaster, such as a tornado, hurricane earthquake, or other event that results in extended power outages, solar ovens can be used to cook and heat food.&nbsp; Many of us will never face such an event, but we're all pretty sure we won't be, just as those who experienced the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina thought they'd never face such an event.&nbsp; But there are other great reasons to own a solar oven and two of those reasons are camping and the other is because they're just plain fun!&nbsp; Take your solar oven camping and while you're off exploring and swimming and canoeing, your solar oven is back at camp quietly and efficiently slow-cooking lunch or supper.&nbsp; But the greatest reason to love solar cooking is because it's fun knowing that you can put some ingredients in a pot or pan and leave it in the sun and come back later and realize that your next meal required no connection to the power grid and required the making of no fires.&nbsp; It's just a neat thing to do!</p><p>
	If you've tried a cooking comaparison with, or cooked with, the sun using a solar oven, please tell us about your experience in the comments below.</p>]]></content:encoded>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title><![CDATA[10 Reasons For Chucking It All & Going Off-Grid]]></title>
			<link>https://www.mrsolar.com/powerswitch/10-reasons-for-chucking-it-all-going-offgrid/</link>
			<pubDate>Thu, 12 Nov 2015 15:18:19 +0000</pubDate>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.mrsolar.com/powerswitch/10-reasons-for-chucking-it-all-going-offgrid/</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[<p>I can't tell you how many times I've heard friends and seen people online dreaming of a simpler life.  They talk about how nice it would be to leave it all behind and they post images of cabins in idyllic settings and express their dreams of a simpler lifestyle, free of the stresses of the modern-day rat race.  Most of us at one time or another have fantasized about being able to live our lives without having to be shackled to a desk or machine all day, sometimes every day.  We experience so many things that add to the this desire for escape: the hustle-and-bustle of urban and suburban life and work, where communting through stop-and-go traffic is a twice-a-day life-waster; crime and other societal issues that we prefer to live with less of or without in our lives and our children's lives; health issues resulting from a more toxic environment and from the processed and fatty foods we consume from the local grocer.</p><p>For many the dream is impractical but, for others, the desire to change their lives is compelling.  Following, in no particular order, are ten reasons many people give for making the leap from stressed-out, over-materialized lives to lives of sustainablity and peace.</p><p>1.  Living <a class="moreinfo" title="Literally meaning no connection to the main electrical grid." style="text-decoration: none;">off-the-grid</a> allows one to be free and to determine one's own destiny.  Properly done, going off-grid is as close to being "free" as an American can get.  "Close" because one still needs certain things that cannot be self-produced and there may be taxes that have to be paid.  But being off-grid is as close to freedom as it gets.</p><p>2.  A warm satisfaction that comes from living a more sustainable and self-sufficient lifestyle is a reason often given.  There's nothing like going to your own garden and plucking a tomato off the vine and there's nothing like producing your own electricity.</p><p>3.  A desire to have less impact on one's environment and the planet is a common reason for going off-grid.  No matter what is causing climate change, the climate is changing and if humans are not directly responsible, then we are at least partially responsible.  However, we are not going to just stop using fossil fuels.  Doing so would collapse civilization.  But we can help mitigate climate change by voluntarily changing the way we live and allowing a slow and steady adaptation to using less fossil fuels and simplifying our lives to include less of the products of civilization, ie: reducing demand for material "things" and using less fuel to get back and forth to work, school, grocery store, etc., we can live without helps to reduce CO².</p><p><a href="/cabin-solar-power-kits/"><img src="/product_images/uploaded_images/off-grid-house.jpg" style="width: 376px; float: left; margin: 0px 10px 10px 0px;" alt="Off-Grid Home"></a></p><p>4.  The peace-of-mind that living a simpler, more satisfying lifestyle brings.  When one has more time to appreciate the small things, the small things become very meaningful.  The very scent of fresh air or of a wildflower can bring on a sense of well-being.  Sitting on the front porch learning to play a guitar can be much more fulfilling than watching a crime drama series on television.</p><p>5.  Growing one's own fruits, nuts, and vegetables, as well raising livestock provides one's family with wholesome, organic food, un-polluted by chemical preservatives and growth hormones found in processed foods can be a compelling reason for going off-grid.</p><p>6. The security of living a more secure life away from the issues associated with more populated areas, such as a large city. It's a fact that the more people who live in proximity to you the more crime that occurs. There is also the problem of gangs and other negative influences that affect our children whether in their neighborhoods or in their schools. "Off-grid" usually means rural and rural means that all of the issues of safety we face in cities and suburbs exist at a much smaller scale, or not at all. Living off-grid also means that one becomes responsible for one's own safety. No need to elaborate there.</p><p>7.  Many people who go off-grid have done so after a lot of planning.  This planning often includes, as it should, the advance purchase of a plot of land on which to live.  Advance planning may also include the establishment of a water source, most often a well.  Most also install a septic system.  And, of course, one needs some sort of shelter in place, such as a cabin, mobile home, or even an RV.  With good advanced planning and the basics in place, one can live debt-free, which is a major goal and, for many, the very reason for going off-grid.</p><p>8.  Every American is aware to some extent of how life was during the Great Depression.  The nation's economy collapsed and many people who had never experienced poverty became poor and hungry.  People in cities found it hard to find a job or something for their families to eat.  Going off-grid means self-sufficiency and preparedness.  When you produce your own food, water, and electricity, and if you stay well-stocked, and if you are able to hunt, you can weather such an economic downturn.</p><p>9.  Learning to live off of what land and nature provides you is a great motivation for going off-grid.  Hunting, fishing, growing food are all very satisfying activities that go in to living off-grid.  Look at those 
again: hunting, fishing, and growing food.  Those are not only life-sustaining, they're also things many people in on-grid lives strive to do for fun!  So, being off-grid can also be a fun life while being sustaining.</p><p>10. For those families with children who choose the off-grid lifestyle, going off-grid can instill in them a sense of self-sufficiency.  They learn to do the things it takes to live off the land and gain a sense of independence and adventure that is hard to come by in the mean streets and school corridors of the Big City.  Parents are able to raise their children in a way that is not corrupted or interfered with like it can be in a larger society that often times infuences children in ways that their parents don't agree with or believe in.</p><p>This is by no means a comprehensive list.  Everyone is different and will have many reasons for wanting to escape the rat race.  Going off-grid means a very different life for most people and it is a major move and can be scary.  But it's up to each of us whether or not it's practical and something we want bad enough.  And a closing bit of advice for anyone seriously considering leaving it all behind:  Plan like you've never planned before!  Don't get impatient; put everything in place first!  Do this, and the transition from rat race to tranquil off-grid living will be a smooth and rewarding one.</p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I can't tell you how many times I've heard friends and seen people online dreaming of a simpler life.  They talk about how nice it would be to leave it all behind and they post images of cabins in idyllic settings and express their dreams of a simpler lifestyle, free of the stresses of the modern-day rat race.  Most of us at one time or another have fantasized about being able to live our lives without having to be shackled to a desk or machine all day, sometimes every day.  We experience so many things that add to the this desire for escape: the hustle-and-bustle of urban and suburban life and work, where communting through stop-and-go traffic is a twice-a-day life-waster; crime and other societal issues that we prefer to live with less of or without in our lives and our children's lives; health issues resulting from a more toxic environment and from the processed and fatty foods we consume from the local grocer.</p><p>For many the dream is impractical but, for others, the desire to change their lives is compelling.  Following, in no particular order, are ten reasons many people give for making the leap from stressed-out, over-materialized lives to lives of sustainablity and peace.</p><p>1.  Living <a class="moreinfo" title="Literally meaning no connection to the main electrical grid." style="text-decoration: none;">off-the-grid</a> allows one to be free and to determine one's own destiny.  Properly done, going off-grid is as close to being "free" as an American can get.  "Close" because one still needs certain things that cannot be self-produced and there may be taxes that have to be paid.  But being off-grid is as close to freedom as it gets.</p><p>2.  A warm satisfaction that comes from living a more sustainable and self-sufficient lifestyle is a reason often given.  There's nothing like going to your own garden and plucking a tomato off the vine and there's nothing like producing your own electricity.</p><p>3.  A desire to have less impact on one's environment and the planet is a common reason for going off-grid.  No matter what is causing climate change, the climate is changing and if humans are not directly responsible, then we are at least partially responsible.  However, we are not going to just stop using fossil fuels.  Doing so would collapse civilization.  But we can help mitigate climate change by voluntarily changing the way we live and allowing a slow and steady adaptation to using less fossil fuels and simplifying our lives to include less of the products of civilization, ie: reducing demand for material "things" and using less fuel to get back and forth to work, school, grocery store, etc., we can live without helps to reduce CO².</p><p><a href="/cabin-solar-power-kits/"><img src="/product_images/uploaded_images/off-grid-house.jpg" style="width: 376px; float: left; margin: 0px 10px 10px 0px;" alt="Off-Grid Home"></a></p><p>4.  The peace-of-mind that living a simpler, more satisfying lifestyle brings.  When one has more time to appreciate the small things, the small things become very meaningful.  The very scent of fresh air or of a wildflower can bring on a sense of well-being.  Sitting on the front porch learning to play a guitar can be much more fulfilling than watching a crime drama series on television.</p><p>5.  Growing one's own fruits, nuts, and vegetables, as well raising livestock provides one's family with wholesome, organic food, un-polluted by chemical preservatives and growth hormones found in processed foods can be a compelling reason for going off-grid.</p><p>6. The security of living a more secure life away from the issues associated with more populated areas, such as a large city. It's a fact that the more people who live in proximity to you the more crime that occurs. There is also the problem of gangs and other negative influences that affect our children whether in their neighborhoods or in their schools. "Off-grid" usually means rural and rural means that all of the issues of safety we face in cities and suburbs exist at a much smaller scale, or not at all. Living off-grid also means that one becomes responsible for one's own safety. No need to elaborate there.</p><p>7.  Many people who go off-grid have done so after a lot of planning.  This planning often includes, as it should, the advance purchase of a plot of land on which to live.  Advance planning may also include the establishment of a water source, most often a well.  Most also install a septic system.  And, of course, one needs some sort of shelter in place, such as a cabin, mobile home, or even an RV.  With good advanced planning and the basics in place, one can live debt-free, which is a major goal and, for many, the very reason for going off-grid.</p><p>8.  Every American is aware to some extent of how life was during the Great Depression.  The nation's economy collapsed and many people who had never experienced poverty became poor and hungry.  People in cities found it hard to find a job or something for their families to eat.  Going off-grid means self-sufficiency and preparedness.  When you produce your own food, water, and electricity, and if you stay well-stocked, and if you are able to hunt, you can weather such an economic downturn.</p><p>9.  Learning to live off of what land and nature provides you is a great motivation for going off-grid.  Hunting, fishing, growing food are all very satisfying activities that go in to living off-grid.  Look at those 
again: hunting, fishing, and growing food.  Those are not only life-sustaining, they're also things many people in on-grid lives strive to do for fun!  So, being off-grid can also be a fun life while being sustaining.</p><p>10. For those families with children who choose the off-grid lifestyle, going off-grid can instill in them a sense of self-sufficiency.  They learn to do the things it takes to live off the land and gain a sense of independence and adventure that is hard to come by in the mean streets and school corridors of the Big City.  Parents are able to raise their children in a way that is not corrupted or interfered with like it can be in a larger society that often times infuences children in ways that their parents don't agree with or believe in.</p><p>This is by no means a comprehensive list.  Everyone is different and will have many reasons for wanting to escape the rat race.  Going off-grid means a very different life for most people and it is a major move and can be scary.  But it's up to each of us whether or not it's practical and something we want bad enough.  And a closing bit of advice for anyone seriously considering leaving it all behind:  Plan like you've never planned before!  Don't get impatient; put everything in place first!  Do this, and the transition from rat race to tranquil off-grid living will be a smooth and rewarding one.</p>]]></content:encoded>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title><![CDATA[580 Watts RV Solar Power Install]]></title>
			<link>https://www.mrsolar.com/powerswitch/580-watts-rv-solar-power-install/</link>
			<pubDate>Wed, 11 Nov 2015 19:15:49 +0000</pubDate>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.mrsolar.com/powerswitch/580-watts-rv-solar-power-install/</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[<iframe src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/IgKSBs1ewh4" allowfullscreen="" frameborder="0" height="315" width="560"></iframe>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<iframe src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/IgKSBs1ewh4" allowfullscreen="" frameborder="0" height="315" width="560"></iframe>]]></content:encoded>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title><![CDATA[A Solar-Powered Wheelchair? Yaasssss! ]]></title>
			<link>https://www.mrsolar.com/powerswitch/a-solarpowered-wheelchair/</link>
			<pubDate>Thu, 05 Nov 2015 02:18:31 +0000</pubDate>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.mrsolar.com/powerswitch/a-solarpowered-wheelchair/</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[<p>
	Ok, this right here is exciting!&nbsp; We just love discovering all the ways people are using solar energy and this is one of the coolest we've seen so far!&nbsp;</p><p>
	When graduate students at the University of Virginia heard about the “Change My World in One Minute” competition being sponsored by 
	<a href="https://worldcpday.org" target="_blank">World Cerebral Palsy Day</a> in 2012, they jumped to the challenge and created something pretty cool: a solar-powered wheelchair!</p><p>
	Check it out...you won't want these few minutes back!</p><iframe src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/GRr6O-1-Jqk" allowfullscreen="" frameborder="0" height="540" width="980">
</iframe>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
	Ok, this right here is exciting!&nbsp; We just love discovering all the ways people are using solar energy and this is one of the coolest we've seen so far!&nbsp;</p><p>
	When graduate students at the University of Virginia heard about the “Change My World in One Minute” competition being sponsored by 
	<a href="https://worldcpday.org" target="_blank">World Cerebral Palsy Day</a> in 2012, they jumped to the challenge and created something pretty cool: a solar-powered wheelchair!</p><p>
	Check it out...you won't want these few minutes back!</p><iframe src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/GRr6O-1-Jqk" allowfullscreen="" frameborder="0" height="540" width="980">
</iframe>]]></content:encoded>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title><![CDATA[PV Apps: Radar Inlet Observing System]]></title>
			<link>https://www.mrsolar.com/powerswitch/pv-apps-radar-inlet-observing-system/</link>
			<pubDate>Mon, 19 Oct 2015 19:07:08 +0000</pubDate>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.mrsolar.com/powerswitch/pv-apps-radar-inlet-observing-system/</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[<p>
	<a target="_blank" href="http://www.frf.usace.army.mil/aboutUS/equipment.shtml"><img alt="Radar Inlet Observing System (RIOS)" style="float: left; padding: 0px 10px 10px 0px; margin: 0px 10px 10px 0px;" src="http://www.frf.usace.army.mil/pics/rios01.jpg"></a>A 
	<a href="http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpl/login.jsp?tp=&amp;arnumber=6404957&amp;url=http%3A%2F%2Fieeexplore.ieee.org%2Fxpls%2Fabs_all.jsp%3Farnumber%3D6404957" target="_blank">Radar Inlet Observing System</a>, or RIOS, is an mobile instrument package platform which remotely measures the position of inlet channels and shoals using X-band radar to continuously measure hourly wave conditions and breaking intensity, speed, period, angle and sand position. This information is then used to assess the navigability of inlets and river mouths.</p><p>
	RIOS is an autonomous sensor platform using solar panels and an LPG generator to provide the electricity needed to power the radar sensors and the wireless internet data transmitter.</p><p>
	Hourly data gathered from RIOS is used to assess the navigability of 
tidal inlet.</p><p>
	The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is currently 
	<a href="http://www.sjccoc.us/minrec/agendas/2015/102015cd/10-20-15CON17.pdf" target="_blank">seeking a lease</a> for a RIOS platform for Vilano Beach&nbsp; in St. Johns County, FL.&nbsp; The St Johns County Commission <a href="http://www.frf.usace.army.mil/aboutUS/equipment.shtml">will vote Tuesday</a> (10.20.15) on whether or not to lease to the Corps for $1 a small bit of county-owned land at Vilano Beach.</p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
	<a target="_blank" href="http://www.frf.usace.army.mil/aboutUS/equipment.shtml"><img alt="Radar Inlet Observing System (RIOS)" style="float: left; padding: 0px 10px 10px 0px; margin: 0px 10px 10px 0px;" src="http://www.frf.usace.army.mil/pics/rios01.jpg"></a>A 
	<a href="http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpl/login.jsp?tp=&amp;arnumber=6404957&amp;url=http%3A%2F%2Fieeexplore.ieee.org%2Fxpls%2Fabs_all.jsp%3Farnumber%3D6404957" target="_blank">Radar Inlet Observing System</a>, or RIOS, is an mobile instrument package platform which remotely measures the position of inlet channels and shoals using X-band radar to continuously measure hourly wave conditions and breaking intensity, speed, period, angle and sand position. This information is then used to assess the navigability of inlets and river mouths.</p><p>
	RIOS is an autonomous sensor platform using solar panels and an LPG generator to provide the electricity needed to power the radar sensors and the wireless internet data transmitter.</p><p>
	Hourly data gathered from RIOS is used to assess the navigability of 
tidal inlet.</p><p>
	The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is currently 
	<a href="http://www.sjccoc.us/minrec/agendas/2015/102015cd/10-20-15CON17.pdf" target="_blank">seeking a lease</a> for a RIOS platform for Vilano Beach&nbsp; in St. Johns County, FL.&nbsp; The St Johns County Commission <a href="http://www.frf.usace.army.mil/aboutUS/equipment.shtml">will vote Tuesday</a> (10.20.15) on whether or not to lease to the Corps for $1 a small bit of county-owned land at Vilano Beach.</p>]]></content:encoded>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title><![CDATA[6 Really Cool Ways We Use Solar That You Just Have To See!]]></title>
			<link>https://www.mrsolar.com/powerswitch/6-really-cool-ways-we-use-solar-that-you-just-have-to-see/</link>
			<pubDate>Thu, 15 Oct 2015 00:47:38 +0000</pubDate>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.mrsolar.com/powerswitch/6-really-cool-ways-we-use-solar-that-you-just-have-to-see/</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[<p>
	Using the Sun's energy, whether it's solar heat radiation or the tiny molecules of energy called photons which are literally molecules of light, has come to be known generally as “solar power”.  There are two types of solar energy, “solar thermal”, and “solar electric”.  Solar thermal uses the Sun's heat radiation to concentrate heat for heating or to produce electricity.  Solar electric, technically “photovoltaics”, uses photons of light from the Sun to generate direct current, or DC, electricity.</p><p>
	We've all seen these two versions of solar energy usage on homes and businesses in the form of  “solar panels”.  Solar panels come in both forms of solar energy collection, thermal and electric.  Solar thermal is used on the roof of a home to heat water, which then provides hot water to the home.  
Solar electric (PV) takes the form of solar electric panels, or more generally just solar panels, attached to a roof by a mounting system.  These are the most readily recognizable uses of solar energy.  But technology is certainly not limited to use of solar energy on our homes and businesses.  Here, in no particular order and voted on by no one, we'll look at six really cool ways solar energy is developed and used that you may not be familiar with and you just have to see!</p><h3>Solar Space Station</h3><p>
	Space exploration is cool.&nbsp; Space exploration powered by solar energy is really cool!&nbsp; Solar power has been used to power spacecraft since nearly the beginning of the Space Age.&nbsp; The use of solar panels to power spacecraft is limited those spacecraft that operate within the inner solar system, where the sun's rays are strong.&nbsp; Solar panels, which use gallium arsenide and, more recently, a gallium arsenide and silicon hybrid technology called "multi-junction photovoltaic cells".  Multi-junction photovoltaic cells capture the largest spectrum of light possible and are the leading edge of solar PV technology, exceeding 40% efficiency under ideal conditions.  Some spacecraft that have been powered by solar energy are 
	<a href="" target="_blank">Juno</a> (Jupiter), <a target="_blank" href="http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/planetary/magellan.html">Magellan</a> (Venus), <a href="http://science.nasa.gov/missions/mars-observer/">Mars Observer</a> and <a href="http://mars.nasa.gov/mgs/">Mars Global Surveyor</a> (Mars), <a href="http://rosetta.esa.int/" target="_blank">Rosetta</a> (Comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko).  Earth-orbiting solar-powered spacecraft include the <a target="_blank" href="http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/hubble/main/index.html">Hubble Space Telescope</a>, but the reigning colossus of really cool solar-powered spacecraft is hands-down the International Space Station!</p><p>
	<img style="width: 100%;" src="/product_images/uploaded_images/solar-space-station.jpg"></p><p>
	The <a href="http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/main/index.html">International Space Station (ISS)</a> operates in low Earth orbit and is powered completely by solar
power. Its first component launched into orbit in 1998, and consists
of pressurized modules, external trusses, solar arrays and other
components built by a partnership of nations including the United
States, Canada, Japan, Russia, Italy, Europe, and others.  The ISS is
a series of modules launched into space by Russian Proton and Soyuz
rockets and American space shuttles.</p><p>
	The ISS serves as a micro-gravity and space environment research
laboratory in which crew members conduct experiments in biology,
human biology, physics, astronomy, meteorology and other fields.  All
of these systems are powered by double-sided solar photovoltaic
arrays which provide electrical power for the ISS.</p><p>
	The Russian segment of the station uses 28 volt DC from four
rotating solar arrays mounted on Zarya and Zvezda.  The USOS uses
130–180 V DC from the USOS PV array.  The ROS uses low voltage.  
The two station segments share power with converters.</p><p>
	The solar arrays on ISS normally track the sun to maximize power
generation.  Each array is about 375 m² (450 yd²) in area and 58
meters (63 yd) long.  In the complete configuration, the solar arrays
track the sun by rotating the solar arrays as needed to maximize
exposure to the Sun and to minimize drag, due to the station's low
orbit, as it moves through Earth's shadow.</p><p>
	Rechargeable nickel-hydrogen batteries (NiH2) are used to store
energy generated while the solar panels are exposed to the Sun.  Then
as the ISS is eclipsed by the Earth, this stored energy can then be
used to power the station for the 35 minutes it is in Earth's shadow
during each 90-minute orbit</p><p>
	But enough of that technical stuff.&nbsp; What really matters is the really cool way spacecraft, like the ISS, use solar energy to discover the final frontier!</p><h3>Solar Cars</h3><p>
	Solar cars are vehicles which use solar
photovoltaic cells on the surface of the car to produce electrial
current from photons of sunlight.  This current is then used to
charge batteries in the car.  The batteries provide power to the
electric motors which then turn the wheels of the car.  Solar cars
are generally built for racing and the limitations of using on-board
solar energy to power passenger vehicles are currently insufficient
in providing a reliable source of vehicular transportation.</p><p>
	<img style="width: 100%;" src="/product_images/uploaded_images/solar-car.jpg"></p><p>
	However, there have been great strides
in electric car technology, led by the likes of Elon Musk of Tesla
Motors notoriety and cars like the Toyota Prius and Nissan Leaf. 
These cars use a cord that plugs into a power source in order to
charge the batteries.  All it takes to transform these EV car models
into solar cars is to install a standalone solar power system that
will store the sun's energy in a battery bank which can then be
transferred to the car.  This usually will take the form of a solar
carport but can also be a pole- or roof-mounted solar array.</p><p>
	Solar-powered cars are a developing
technology.  But can it replace traditional fossil-fuel-powered cars?
 For an answer to this important question, we turn to 
	<a href="http://physics.ucsd.edu/~tmurphy/">Tom Murphy</a>, an associate professor of physics at the
University of California, San Diego: “...solar powered cars fall
solidly on the reality side of the reality-fantasy continuum. That
said, pure solar transport (on board generation) will suffer serious
limitations,” says Murphy.  “More reliable transport comes with
nuances that may be irritating to the purist. You can apply a bumper
sticker that says SOLAR POWERED CAR, but in most cases, you will need
to put an asterisk at the end with a lengthy footnote to explain
exactly how you have realized that goal.”</p><p>
	For an extended, by-the-numbers look at
solar cars, check out Tom's article entitled 
	<a href="http://physics.ucsd.edu/do-the-math/2011/11/a-solar-powered-car/#sthash.XSmEZN8J.dpuf"><em>A
Solar Powered Car?
	</em></a>over
on his blog 
	<a href="http://physics.ucsd.edu/do-the-math/"><em>Do
the Math
	</em></a>.
 The article is 4 years old but does a good job of illustrating the
degree of practicality of solar cars.  This writer reckons the
numbers have gotten better in those intervening four years.  Perhaps
Mr. Murphy will stop by and lay some contemporary wisdom down on us
by way of an update to his article.</p><p>
	Using light from the Sun is a really
cool way to power a spin around your neck of the woods!</p><h3>Solar Bricks</h3><p>
	Solar bricks are a really cool way to highlight the driveway or
walkways around a home or business.  Solar bricks come in many
styles, sizes, and colors and can be laid right into the masonry of a
brick sidewalk, driveway, and patio or to accent the perimeter of a
brick wall or to add ambient light to outdoor landscaping features.</p><p>
	Most solar bricks allow sunlight to penetrate during the day to
charge the batteries which, in turn, powers led lights inside the
brick.  When the sun sets and the dark of night advances, these
bricks begin to glow, lighting walkways, driveways, and patios and
providing a way to navigate the dark of night.  Some even have
control systems that allow you to change their color or to turn them
off and on as needed.&nbsp;</p><p>
	<img style="width: 100%;" src="/product_images/uploaded_images/solar-bricks.jpg"></p><p>
	Solar bricks are easy to install and are designed to replace
regular brick and paving stones and are laid using mortar just as
regular bricks are laid and cemented together.  Most quality solar
bricks are able to collect a full charge, even on moderately cloudy
days.  Dark, overcast days may affect the lighting output of solar
bricks but exposure to natural light all day should provide enough
charge to sufficiently light them at night.  And besides, they're a
lot cheaper to install than traditionally wired lighted bricks!</p><p>
	The cost of solar bricks varies depending on the kind of brick
that you want.  Higher quality, more sturdily built lighted bricks
will of course cost more.  Some decorative models will also cost more
but there are many models and brands of solar bricks that are very
reasonably priced.  But another thing that's really cool about
solar-powered bricks is that, once installed, they cost nothing more
to operate!</p><p>
	So, that's two really cool things that make solar bricks a really
cool use of solar energy: it's a brick that lights up at night, and
it costs nothing to operate once installed.  Shall I say it one more
time?  Solar bricks are really cool!</p><h3>Solar Airplanes</h3><p>
	No, we'll probably never see a
solar-powered commercial passenger airliner.   However the day may
come when smaller airplanes, probably motorized gliders, are powered
completely by the Sun.  Solar airplanes, also known as “electric
aircraft”, use thin-film solar cells on the tops of their wings
which provide power to the propellers via a motorized shaft. 
Aerodynamics and physics do the rest.</p><p>
	<img style="width: 100%;" src="/product_images/uploaded_images/solar-airplane.jpg"></p><p>
	Solar airplanes today are mostly
experimental demonstrators and include both manned and unmanned
aerial vehicles. Beginning early in 2015 
	<a href="http://www.solarimpulse.com/"><em>Solar
Impulse
	</em></a>, a manned airplane powered by the Sun, began a
 5-month circumnavigation of the Earth, the first attempt of it's
kind.   In the interest of space, we'll highlight this particular
solar aircraft to help describe this really cool use of solar energy.</p><p>
	<a href="http://www.solarimpulse.com/"><em>Solar
Impulse
	</em></a><em>,</em>
	a Swiss long-range experimental solar-powered aircraft project, is a
privately funded project led by Swiss engineer and businessman André
Borschberg and Swiss psychiatrist and aeronaut Bertrand Piccard, who
gained previous notoriety co-piloting Breitling Orbiter 3, the first
balloon to circumnavigate the world on a non-stop mission. The two
men are currently attempting to achieve the first circumnavigation of
the Earth by a piloted fixed-wing aircraft using only solar power.</p><p>
	Powered by photovoltaic cells and capable of taking off under its
own power, the single-seat monoplane prototype aircraft 
	<em>Solar
Impulse 1
	</em> was designed to remain airborne up to 36 hours. <em>Solar
Impulse 2
	</em>, on the other hand, is a new and improved craft
carrying more PV cells and more powerful motors, among other
improvements, and has a longer range and time in flight.</p><p>
	According to 
	<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_Impulse">Wikipedia</a>,
Piccard and Borschberg began their attempt to circumnavigate the
globe aboard 
	<em>Solar Impulse 2 </em>on
March 9, 2015. Departing from Abu Dhabi, the aircraft was
scheduled to return to Abu Dhabi in August 2015, upon the completion
of its multi-stage journey. By June 1, 2015, the plane had flown
across Asia.  Leaving from Japan on July 3, 2015, the plane completed
the longest leg of its journey, after landing in Hawaii. During that
leg, 
	<a href="http://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2015/07/15/423184042/solar-airplane-s-round-the-world-trip-is-halted-until-2016">however</a>,
the aircraft's batteries experienced thermal damage that is expected
to take months to repair. The 
	<em>Solar Impulse</em> team will attempt
to resume their circumnavigation of the globe in April 2016.</p><p>
	For more information on solar
airplanes, check out this 
	<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electric_aircraft">Wikipedia
article
	</a>.</p><p>
	I don't know about you but flying
around the world is a really cool way to use solar energy!  And when
it comes to 
	<em>Solar Impulse</em>, I say, “Are we there yet?” 
Stay tuned at 
	<a href="http://www.solarimpulse.com/">SolarImpulse.com</a>!</p><h3>Solar Traffic Control and Monitoring</h3><p>
	By now we've all seen them on the side of the road, perhaps at
each end of a school zone or atop a portable speed detection radar
unit.  Solar traffic control lights and monitoring equipment systems 
are devices which are powered by solar panels and batteries. 
Positioned at road intersections, pedestrian crossings, and other
locations to control and monitor the flow of traffic, these systems
use lights in the standard colors red, amber, and green.  Most solar
traffic control systems use a battery bank to power the unit during
nighttime hours.</p><p>
	<img style="width: 100%;" src="/product_images/uploaded_images/solar-traffic.jpg"></p><p>
	Most solar traffic lights use LED lighting technology as they are
more reliable and are energy efficient and have a long life span,
among other advantages. Solar traffic lights consist of battery
enclosures which house the batteries, control panel circuitry,
signage, lights, and a solar panel(s) all mounted on a pole or
trailer.  Solar traffic lighting systems also include a charge
controller to control the charging and discharging of the battery and
a countdown timer which displays the amount of time left before the
battery discharges fully.</p><p>
	Solar traffic lights can also be used during periods following
natural disasters such as hurricanes and tornadoes, when the existing
street lights may not function due to power outages.  Often in times
like these traffic becomes uncontrolled and chaotic and traffic
congestion in the disaster area ensues.  There are also portable
solar-powered street lights that are designed to be carried and
operated by police and relief workers wherever traffic needs to be
regulated.</p><p>
	There are obvious advantages to the use of solar traffic lighting
and control systems: they are self-contained and do not require
external power sources or fuel to operate; they are fast and easy to
set up and operate; and they are autonomous, requiring very little if
any maintenance as they have no moving parts that can break down and
otherwise fail.  In most cases the entire system consists of some
sort of lighting configuration that conveys a universal signal or
textual message, a charge controller, a battery bank, a solar
panel(s), and mounted to a pole or trailer, depending on whether it's
a permanent fixture or a portable unit.</p><p>
	Any way you look at it, using solar to power portable traffic
control and lighting systems in the event of a natural disaster or to
control the flow of traffic through a school or highway construction
zone is a really cool way to use solar energy!</p><h3>Solar Boat</h3><p>
	The one thing I always notice no matter
what kind of motorized boat I'm aboard is the noxious fumes produced
by the burning in the motor of fossil fuels like gasoline or diesel. 
But for some boats and boating applications, there is a viable
alternative: solar-powered boats!</p><p>
	You need three things to move a boat:
energy, propulsion, and a rudder.  In the olden days, the energy to
move a boat was provided by the wind.  The propusive device took the
form of sails.  Then petroleum and cumbustion motors were added to
the methods for propelling a boat through the water.  But now we're
finding that solar energy can be used to power an electric motor
which then turns the boats propeller.  Solar boat design has to take
into account the efficiency of current solar technology when figuring
out how much area is needed to collect enough solar energy.  Most
current solar boat applications are limited to powering boats for
short trips.  But there are experimental applications that take solar
boating to a whole new level.</p><p>
	<img style="width: 100%;" src="/product_images/uploaded_images/solar-boat.jpg"></p><p>
	Meet 
	<a href="http://www.planetsolar.org/boat">PlanetSolar</a>,
a unique sailing vessel that uses solar power to power it's electrical
and propulsion systems.  PlanetSolar is the largest solar-powered
boat in the world.  It launched on 31 March 2010 and after over two
years it became the first solar electric vehicle ever to
circumnavigate the globe.  This solar boat is covered by nearly 6000
square feet of 
	<a href="http://www.mrsolar.com/solar-panels/">solar
panels
	</a> producing around 93 kW of electrical power.   The
current generated by the solar array is used to power one of the two
electric motors in each hull. There are 8.5 tons of lithium-ion
batteries in the ship's two hulls that act as ballast and which store
the energy produced by the solar array. Combined with the
hydrodynamics and aerodynamics of the boat's shape, PlanetSolar can
reach speeds of up to 14 knots. The hull was model tested in wind
tunnels and was tank tested to determine its hydrodynamics and
aerodynamics.  It is currently being used as a floating marine
research laboratory by Geneva University.</p><p>
	But not all solar boats are expected to
get their crews all the way around the world.  A more practical
application of solar powered boating includes the use of
solar-powered water shuttles. The Serpentine Solar Shuttle, operating
on Lake Serpentine in the UK, can carry 42 passengers. The Constance,
which can carry up to 60 passengers, is another solar shuttle that
operates on Lake Constance, on the Germany, Austria and Switzerland
border.  The Hamburg Solar Shuttle carries up to 120 passengers and
operates in Hamburg, Germany.</p><p>
	Whether it's solar-powered sailing around the world or taking a water taxi across a European lake, using solar power to propel a boat is a really cool thing to do!</p><p>
	And there you have it, five really cool ways we use solar!&nbsp; But solar energy is in no way limited to these five examples.&nbsp; There are many more really cool way that we use solar and we'd like to get you involved.&nbsp; In the comments below, tell us another example of a really cool was to use solar energy!&nbsp;</p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
	Using the Sun's energy, whether it's solar heat radiation or the tiny molecules of energy called photons which are literally molecules of light, has come to be known generally as “solar power”.  There are two types of solar energy, “solar thermal”, and “solar electric”.  Solar thermal uses the Sun's heat radiation to concentrate heat for heating or to produce electricity.  Solar electric, technically “photovoltaics”, uses photons of light from the Sun to generate direct current, or DC, electricity.</p><p>
	We've all seen these two versions of solar energy usage on homes and businesses in the form of  “solar panels”.  Solar panels come in both forms of solar energy collection, thermal and electric.  Solar thermal is used on the roof of a home to heat water, which then provides hot water to the home.  
Solar electric (PV) takes the form of solar electric panels, or more generally just solar panels, attached to a roof by a mounting system.  These are the most readily recognizable uses of solar energy.  But technology is certainly not limited to use of solar energy on our homes and businesses.  Here, in no particular order and voted on by no one, we'll look at six really cool ways solar energy is developed and used that you may not be familiar with and you just have to see!</p><h3>Solar Space Station</h3><p>
	Space exploration is cool.&nbsp; Space exploration powered by solar energy is really cool!&nbsp; Solar power has been used to power spacecraft since nearly the beginning of the Space Age.&nbsp; The use of solar panels to power spacecraft is limited those spacecraft that operate within the inner solar system, where the sun's rays are strong.&nbsp; Solar panels, which use gallium arsenide and, more recently, a gallium arsenide and silicon hybrid technology called "multi-junction photovoltaic cells".  Multi-junction photovoltaic cells capture the largest spectrum of light possible and are the leading edge of solar PV technology, exceeding 40% efficiency under ideal conditions.  Some spacecraft that have been powered by solar energy are 
	<a href="" target="_blank">Juno</a> (Jupiter), <a target="_blank" href="http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/planetary/magellan.html">Magellan</a> (Venus), <a href="http://science.nasa.gov/missions/mars-observer/">Mars Observer</a> and <a href="http://mars.nasa.gov/mgs/">Mars Global Surveyor</a> (Mars), <a href="http://rosetta.esa.int/" target="_blank">Rosetta</a> (Comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko).  Earth-orbiting solar-powered spacecraft include the <a target="_blank" href="http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/hubble/main/index.html">Hubble Space Telescope</a>, but the reigning colossus of really cool solar-powered spacecraft is hands-down the International Space Station!</p><p>
	<img style="width: 100%;" src="/product_images/uploaded_images/solar-space-station.jpg"></p><p>
	The <a href="http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/main/index.html">International Space Station (ISS)</a> operates in low Earth orbit and is powered completely by solar
power. Its first component launched into orbit in 1998, and consists
of pressurized modules, external trusses, solar arrays and other
components built by a partnership of nations including the United
States, Canada, Japan, Russia, Italy, Europe, and others.  The ISS is
a series of modules launched into space by Russian Proton and Soyuz
rockets and American space shuttles.</p><p>
	The ISS serves as a micro-gravity and space environment research
laboratory in which crew members conduct experiments in biology,
human biology, physics, astronomy, meteorology and other fields.  All
of these systems are powered by double-sided solar photovoltaic
arrays which provide electrical power for the ISS.</p><p>
	The Russian segment of the station uses 28 volt DC from four
rotating solar arrays mounted on Zarya and Zvezda.  The USOS uses
130–180 V DC from the USOS PV array.  The ROS uses low voltage.  
The two station segments share power with converters.</p><p>
	The solar arrays on ISS normally track the sun to maximize power
generation.  Each array is about 375 m² (450 yd²) in area and 58
meters (63 yd) long.  In the complete configuration, the solar arrays
track the sun by rotating the solar arrays as needed to maximize
exposure to the Sun and to minimize drag, due to the station's low
orbit, as it moves through Earth's shadow.</p><p>
	Rechargeable nickel-hydrogen batteries (NiH2) are used to store
energy generated while the solar panels are exposed to the Sun.  Then
as the ISS is eclipsed by the Earth, this stored energy can then be
used to power the station for the 35 minutes it is in Earth's shadow
during each 90-minute orbit</p><p>
	But enough of that technical stuff.&nbsp; What really matters is the really cool way spacecraft, like the ISS, use solar energy to discover the final frontier!</p><h3>Solar Cars</h3><p>
	Solar cars are vehicles which use solar
photovoltaic cells on the surface of the car to produce electrial
current from photons of sunlight.  This current is then used to
charge batteries in the car.  The batteries provide power to the
electric motors which then turn the wheels of the car.  Solar cars
are generally built for racing and the limitations of using on-board
solar energy to power passenger vehicles are currently insufficient
in providing a reliable source of vehicular transportation.</p><p>
	<img style="width: 100%;" src="/product_images/uploaded_images/solar-car.jpg"></p><p>
	However, there have been great strides
in electric car technology, led by the likes of Elon Musk of Tesla
Motors notoriety and cars like the Toyota Prius and Nissan Leaf. 
These cars use a cord that plugs into a power source in order to
charge the batteries.  All it takes to transform these EV car models
into solar cars is to install a standalone solar power system that
will store the sun's energy in a battery bank which can then be
transferred to the car.  This usually will take the form of a solar
carport but can also be a pole- or roof-mounted solar array.</p><p>
	Solar-powered cars are a developing
technology.  But can it replace traditional fossil-fuel-powered cars?
 For an answer to this important question, we turn to 
	<a href="http://physics.ucsd.edu/~tmurphy/">Tom Murphy</a>, an associate professor of physics at the
University of California, San Diego: “...solar powered cars fall
solidly on the reality side of the reality-fantasy continuum. That
said, pure solar transport (on board generation) will suffer serious
limitations,” says Murphy.  “More reliable transport comes with
nuances that may be irritating to the purist. You can apply a bumper
sticker that says SOLAR POWERED CAR, but in most cases, you will need
to put an asterisk at the end with a lengthy footnote to explain
exactly how you have realized that goal.”</p><p>
	For an extended, by-the-numbers look at
solar cars, check out Tom's article entitled 
	<a href="http://physics.ucsd.edu/do-the-math/2011/11/a-solar-powered-car/#sthash.XSmEZN8J.dpuf"><em>A
Solar Powered Car?
	</em></a>over
on his blog 
	<a href="http://physics.ucsd.edu/do-the-math/"><em>Do
the Math
	</em></a>.
 The article is 4 years old but does a good job of illustrating the
degree of practicality of solar cars.  This writer reckons the
numbers have gotten better in those intervening four years.  Perhaps
Mr. Murphy will stop by and lay some contemporary wisdom down on us
by way of an update to his article.</p><p>
	Using light from the Sun is a really
cool way to power a spin around your neck of the woods!</p><h3>Solar Bricks</h3><p>
	Solar bricks are a really cool way to highlight the driveway or
walkways around a home or business.  Solar bricks come in many
styles, sizes, and colors and can be laid right into the masonry of a
brick sidewalk, driveway, and patio or to accent the perimeter of a
brick wall or to add ambient light to outdoor landscaping features.</p><p>
	Most solar bricks allow sunlight to penetrate during the day to
charge the batteries which, in turn, powers led lights inside the
brick.  When the sun sets and the dark of night advances, these
bricks begin to glow, lighting walkways, driveways, and patios and
providing a way to navigate the dark of night.  Some even have
control systems that allow you to change their color or to turn them
off and on as needed.&nbsp;</p><p>
	<img style="width: 100%;" src="/product_images/uploaded_images/solar-bricks.jpg"></p><p>
	Solar bricks are easy to install and are designed to replace
regular brick and paving stones and are laid using mortar just as
regular bricks are laid and cemented together.  Most quality solar
bricks are able to collect a full charge, even on moderately cloudy
days.  Dark, overcast days may affect the lighting output of solar
bricks but exposure to natural light all day should provide enough
charge to sufficiently light them at night.  And besides, they're a
lot cheaper to install than traditionally wired lighted bricks!</p><p>
	The cost of solar bricks varies depending on the kind of brick
that you want.  Higher quality, more sturdily built lighted bricks
will of course cost more.  Some decorative models will also cost more
but there are many models and brands of solar bricks that are very
reasonably priced.  But another thing that's really cool about
solar-powered bricks is that, once installed, they cost nothing more
to operate!</p><p>
	So, that's two really cool things that make solar bricks a really
cool use of solar energy: it's a brick that lights up at night, and
it costs nothing to operate once installed.  Shall I say it one more
time?  Solar bricks are really cool!</p><h3>Solar Airplanes</h3><p>
	No, we'll probably never see a
solar-powered commercial passenger airliner.   However the day may
come when smaller airplanes, probably motorized gliders, are powered
completely by the Sun.  Solar airplanes, also known as “electric
aircraft”, use thin-film solar cells on the tops of their wings
which provide power to the propellers via a motorized shaft. 
Aerodynamics and physics do the rest.</p><p>
	<img style="width: 100%;" src="/product_images/uploaded_images/solar-airplane.jpg"></p><p>
	Solar airplanes today are mostly
experimental demonstrators and include both manned and unmanned
aerial vehicles. Beginning early in 2015 
	<a href="http://www.solarimpulse.com/"><em>Solar
Impulse
	</em></a>, a manned airplane powered by the Sun, began a
 5-month circumnavigation of the Earth, the first attempt of it's
kind.   In the interest of space, we'll highlight this particular
solar aircraft to help describe this really cool use of solar energy.</p><p>
	<a href="http://www.solarimpulse.com/"><em>Solar
Impulse
	</em></a><em>,</em>
	a Swiss long-range experimental solar-powered aircraft project, is a
privately funded project led by Swiss engineer and businessman André
Borschberg and Swiss psychiatrist and aeronaut Bertrand Piccard, who
gained previous notoriety co-piloting Breitling Orbiter 3, the first
balloon to circumnavigate the world on a non-stop mission. The two
men are currently attempting to achieve the first circumnavigation of
the Earth by a piloted fixed-wing aircraft using only solar power.</p><p>
	Powered by photovoltaic cells and capable of taking off under its
own power, the single-seat monoplane prototype aircraft 
	<em>Solar
Impulse 1
	</em> was designed to remain airborne up to 36 hours. <em>Solar
Impulse 2
	</em>, on the other hand, is a new and improved craft
carrying more PV cells and more powerful motors, among other
improvements, and has a longer range and time in flight.</p><p>
	According to 
	<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_Impulse">Wikipedia</a>,
Piccard and Borschberg began their attempt to circumnavigate the
globe aboard 
	<em>Solar Impulse 2 </em>on
March 9, 2015. Departing from Abu Dhabi, the aircraft was
scheduled to return to Abu Dhabi in August 2015, upon the completion
of its multi-stage journey. By June 1, 2015, the plane had flown
across Asia.  Leaving from Japan on July 3, 2015, the plane completed
the longest leg of its journey, after landing in Hawaii. During that
leg, 
	<a href="http://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2015/07/15/423184042/solar-airplane-s-round-the-world-trip-is-halted-until-2016">however</a>,
the aircraft's batteries experienced thermal damage that is expected
to take months to repair. The 
	<em>Solar Impulse</em> team will attempt
to resume their circumnavigation of the globe in April 2016.</p><p>
	For more information on solar
airplanes, check out this 
	<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electric_aircraft">Wikipedia
article
	</a>.</p><p>
	I don't know about you but flying
around the world is a really cool way to use solar energy!  And when
it comes to 
	<em>Solar Impulse</em>, I say, “Are we there yet?” 
Stay tuned at 
	<a href="http://www.solarimpulse.com/">SolarImpulse.com</a>!</p><h3>Solar Traffic Control and Monitoring</h3><p>
	By now we've all seen them on the side of the road, perhaps at
each end of a school zone or atop a portable speed detection radar
unit.  Solar traffic control lights and monitoring equipment systems 
are devices which are powered by solar panels and batteries. 
Positioned at road intersections, pedestrian crossings, and other
locations to control and monitor the flow of traffic, these systems
use lights in the standard colors red, amber, and green.  Most solar
traffic control systems use a battery bank to power the unit during
nighttime hours.</p><p>
	<img style="width: 100%;" src="/product_images/uploaded_images/solar-traffic.jpg"></p><p>
	Most solar traffic lights use LED lighting technology as they are
more reliable and are energy efficient and have a long life span,
among other advantages. Solar traffic lights consist of battery
enclosures which house the batteries, control panel circuitry,
signage, lights, and a solar panel(s) all mounted on a pole or
trailer.  Solar traffic lighting systems also include a charge
controller to control the charging and discharging of the battery and
a countdown timer which displays the amount of time left before the
battery discharges fully.</p><p>
	Solar traffic lights can also be used during periods following
natural disasters such as hurricanes and tornadoes, when the existing
street lights may not function due to power outages.  Often in times
like these traffic becomes uncontrolled and chaotic and traffic
congestion in the disaster area ensues.  There are also portable
solar-powered street lights that are designed to be carried and
operated by police and relief workers wherever traffic needs to be
regulated.</p><p>
	There are obvious advantages to the use of solar traffic lighting
and control systems: they are self-contained and do not require
external power sources or fuel to operate; they are fast and easy to
set up and operate; and they are autonomous, requiring very little if
any maintenance as they have no moving parts that can break down and
otherwise fail.  In most cases the entire system consists of some
sort of lighting configuration that conveys a universal signal or
textual message, a charge controller, a battery bank, a solar
panel(s), and mounted to a pole or trailer, depending on whether it's
a permanent fixture or a portable unit.</p><p>
	Any way you look at it, using solar to power portable traffic
control and lighting systems in the event of a natural disaster or to
control the flow of traffic through a school or highway construction
zone is a really cool way to use solar energy!</p><h3>Solar Boat</h3><p>
	The one thing I always notice no matter
what kind of motorized boat I'm aboard is the noxious fumes produced
by the burning in the motor of fossil fuels like gasoline or diesel. 
But for some boats and boating applications, there is a viable
alternative: solar-powered boats!</p><p>
	You need three things to move a boat:
energy, propulsion, and a rudder.  In the olden days, the energy to
move a boat was provided by the wind.  The propusive device took the
form of sails.  Then petroleum and cumbustion motors were added to
the methods for propelling a boat through the water.  But now we're
finding that solar energy can be used to power an electric motor
which then turns the boats propeller.  Solar boat design has to take
into account the efficiency of current solar technology when figuring
out how much area is needed to collect enough solar energy.  Most
current solar boat applications are limited to powering boats for
short trips.  But there are experimental applications that take solar
boating to a whole new level.</p><p>
	<img style="width: 100%;" src="/product_images/uploaded_images/solar-boat.jpg"></p><p>
	Meet 
	<a href="http://www.planetsolar.org/boat">PlanetSolar</a>,
a unique sailing vessel that uses solar power to power it's electrical
and propulsion systems.  PlanetSolar is the largest solar-powered
boat in the world.  It launched on 31 March 2010 and after over two
years it became the first solar electric vehicle ever to
circumnavigate the globe.  This solar boat is covered by nearly 6000
square feet of 
	<a href="http://www.mrsolar.com/solar-panels/">solar
panels
	</a> producing around 93 kW of electrical power.   The
current generated by the solar array is used to power one of the two
electric motors in each hull. There are 8.5 tons of lithium-ion
batteries in the ship's two hulls that act as ballast and which store
the energy produced by the solar array. Combined with the
hydrodynamics and aerodynamics of the boat's shape, PlanetSolar can
reach speeds of up to 14 knots. The hull was model tested in wind
tunnels and was tank tested to determine its hydrodynamics and
aerodynamics.  It is currently being used as a floating marine
research laboratory by Geneva University.</p><p>
	But not all solar boats are expected to
get their crews all the way around the world.  A more practical
application of solar powered boating includes the use of
solar-powered water shuttles. The Serpentine Solar Shuttle, operating
on Lake Serpentine in the UK, can carry 42 passengers. The Constance,
which can carry up to 60 passengers, is another solar shuttle that
operates on Lake Constance, on the Germany, Austria and Switzerland
border.  The Hamburg Solar Shuttle carries up to 120 passengers and
operates in Hamburg, Germany.</p><p>
	Whether it's solar-powered sailing around the world or taking a water taxi across a European lake, using solar power to propel a boat is a really cool thing to do!</p><p>
	And there you have it, five really cool ways we use solar!&nbsp; But solar energy is in no way limited to these five examples.&nbsp; There are many more really cool way that we use solar and we'd like to get you involved.&nbsp; In the comments below, tell us another example of a really cool was to use solar energy!&nbsp;</p>]]></content:encoded>
		</item>
	</channel>
</rss>
