I'm wondering if anyone out there has built a solar power supply for a tractor's block heater. I'm planning on storing my tractor in a storage building that has no ac power. All I would need for power in the building is something that could run a 120 volt 150 watt block heater for winter use. So I am thinking solar panels with battery system and inverter. The battery capacity would need to be sufficient to run that 150 watt block heater for a 24 hour period at most and more likely only need to run it for 12-15 hours. Any ideas welcome. Thanks
I've never heard of a block heater that small. That's only 1.25 Amps. Not going to produce much heat. Like
@4570Man, I'm wondering if a zero got left off of that number? Or perhaps an extra zero was added and you meant 15 amps, not watts? I'm going to assume so for calculation purposes.
I live off grid and use solar for our electricity. I installed our system as well as several others in the area. In a nutshell, it's not realistic to use solar to run a block heater in the northeastern US. That might be a viable option, some of the time, in a high desert area where it's common to have full sun and intense cold at the same time. It could be done in the northeast, but it would take a huge (expensive) system, as in many thousands of dollars worth. To run a 1500-1800 watt block heater for 3 hours a day with no charging happening (the most likely time to need it is at night) you'd need roughly 3-4000 amp hours worth of batteries, so around $4000. That's just batteries. Haven't even started calculating the panels, panel stand, charge controller, cables, wire, fuse box, breakers, inverter etc. etc. Rough guess is you're going to be in the $10,000 ballpark. That's a lot of money to run a block heater. Much simpler and far less expensive to either run power to the building or, if that's not possible for some reason, get an inverter generator and use that.
I use a Honda 2200 inverter generator to charge our batteries in the winter when we don't have enough sun. I use the same generator to power a block heater when I need one. Set it up so that the exhaust is blowing underneath the engine being warmed and ideally cover the machine with a tarp to help keep the heat in. Run it for 2-3 hours, ideally, although even just a half hour helps and can be enough if it's not too cold.