Before I got serious about off-grid living, I worked in facilities management for about fifteen years—mostly managing HVAC systems and power distribution in office buildings. Bit ironic really, considering I'm now obsessed with managing my own power on a micro scale.
That background actually helped loads when I started planning my setup. Understanding load calculations and how systems behave under stress meant I didn't make some of the rookie mistakes I see folks making. Though I'll admit, residential off-grid is a completely different beast from commercial work.
I've had the mobile bug for ages though. Started with a knackered old caravan about ten years back, upgraded to a narrowboat five years ago, and now I'm looking at putting a proper system together for a motorhome conversion. Each step taught me something different—the boat showed me how tight space forces efficiency, and the caravan taught me why redundancy matters when you're stuck without hookups.
The facilities background gave me the income stability to actually invest in decent kit (Victron gear doesn't come cheap), but honestly, the real education came from living with my mistakes. Nothing teaches you about battery management like discovering you've discharged your leisure battery to nothing at midnight in January.
What's interesting is how many people go off-grid but don't really understand their consumption patterns first. They just bolt on solar and hope. That's how I nearly ended up doing it.
Curious what others did before the jump—did you come from a technical background or more learn-on-the-fly? Reckon it makes a difference?