Pat Anderson
New member
This weekend's project (along with cutting in the new hatch below the motorwell) was to get the Airhead running solely on solar power. We originally tried a Nicro Solar Vent (5 years ago) but it would not stay charged.
This is a 15 watt PV panel from Harbor Freight Tools.

The Solar Controller is also from Harbor Freight. The connections are for the PV panel, the battery (one of the Optima Bluetops that were the original house batteries) and the load, which in this case is the 80ma fan in the Airhead.
The PV panel is mounted on a piece of 1/4" Starboard from Tap Plastics in Bellevue, WA. The Starboard has 4 rubber feet and is held in place (for now) by straps. The lead runs (for now) through the bathroom window. Eventually if all works as planned, the Starboard base will be permanently mounted in place and the lead will come in through a clam shell in cabin wall.

The PV panel will run the fan with even a little amount of light without the battery connected, but the PV panel and controller keep the battery charged (so far so good on that one) so the fan runs on the PV when there is light and on the battery when there isn't. This ought to work great even in the cloudy PNW...
This is a 15 watt PV panel from Harbor Freight Tools.

The Solar Controller is also from Harbor Freight. The connections are for the PV panel, the battery (one of the Optima Bluetops that were the original house batteries) and the load, which in this case is the 80ma fan in the Airhead.
The PV panel is mounted on a piece of 1/4" Starboard from Tap Plastics in Bellevue, WA. The Starboard has 4 rubber feet and is held in place (for now) by straps. The lead runs (for now) through the bathroom window. Eventually if all works as planned, the Starboard base will be permanently mounted in place and the lead will come in through a clam shell in cabin wall.

The PV panel will run the fan with even a little amount of light without the battery connected, but the PV panel and controller keep the battery charged (so far so good on that one) so the fan runs on the PV when there is light and on the battery when there isn't. This ought to work great even in the cloudy PNW...