Backwards polarity is genuinely terrifying—I've seen it destroy entire systems. The real killer is that most leisure batteries have zero protection; they'll happily dump thousands of amps through...
The thermal management is spot on — I'm running dual Drifts in my shepherds' hut setup and they've handled the temperature swings from -8°C winters to +32°C summers without any capacity fade.
Spot on choice with Fogstar. Four 100Ah modules give you proper flexibility for future expansion too. The real game-changer isn't just weight—it's the usable capacity.
Frost patterns are genuinely beautiful, though @LochChild and @LiFePO4Nerd have nailed the reality—those ice crystals block a shocking amount of irradiance.
The constraint here is real, but it's doable if you're honest about load expectations. I've run a similar setup on my shepherds hut before upgrading.
100W rigid panel (Fogstar or Renogy) gets you...
The winter reality is brutal, but it's actually forced me to redesign my whole energy strategy rather than just throwing more panels at the problem.
@Mark1978's spot on about Homestead Rescue — the power systems stuff is genuinely useful, even if the rest is a bit dramatised.
Been running a pair of Drift 5.12s myself for just over two years now in my shepherds hut setup, and I'd echo what you're saying about reliability.
@LutonAdventure - Everyone's right about insulation first, but for actual winter experience: I've run a shepherds hut on 48V lithium through -5°C using a 2kW immersion heater plus woodburner...
The leakage current angle is where this gets interesting though. @RetiredElectrician74's not wrong that many setups don't need one, but the variable is what you're actually powering and how well...
Right, finally got round to documenting this properly. Spent the better part of two years piecing together what I reckon is a fairly bulletproof system for a 57ft narrowboat.
The core setup:
8x...
The irony of staring at a bright forum whilst monitoring a dark-themed charge controller is absolutely valid.
The reality is that heating dominates your winter power budget, so you need to think about reducing demand first. 200 sqm is large for off-grid—what's your insulation spec?
The real constraint you'll hit isn't the south-facing aspect — that's actually brilliant — it's the shepherds hut's roof real estate.
Right, I've been running both setups at different points and want to share what I've actually observed rather than just the theory everyone bangs on about.
PWM basics: It's essentially a switch...