Author Topic: Arch for solar Panels  (Read 14435 times)

rbrtmccorkle

  • Second Mate
  • **
  • Posts: 26
  • Karma: +0/-0
  • Boat Model: Barvaria Ocean 42
  • Boat Year: 1999
Arch for solar Panels
« on: December 28 2017, 19:06 »
High all

Bought a 1999 Ocean 42 and am currently outfitting for Long Term Cruising.  I'm thinking the minimum additions I'll need are as follows:

  1. Solar Charging System
  2. Water Maker
  3. AIS

My question today is are there any strong opinions on where place the solar Pannels?  I've been looking online at some pre-Arches.  A company in New Jersey sells these and has pic's of one successfully installed on a Bavaria 38.  The arch looks tall enough to not obstruct the swim steps and appears to be fabricated out of 1 1/2" to 2" stainless? 

Anybody have thoughts on different approaches?

Bob McCorkle
SV Chaos

Yngmar

  • Administrator
  • *****
  • Posts: 1594
  • Karma: +22/-2
  • Boat Model: 40 Ocean
  • Boat Year: 2001
Re: Arch for solar Panels
« Reply #1 on: December 28 2017, 19:56 »
I've thought about this long and hard, and came to the conclusion that a stern arch is the best way to place solar panels when used as primary means of power generation (i.e. if you do not have wind power or a genset).

I've designed and built mine last year. It looks like the below. I've been meaning to write a proper blog article about it (some day), but meanwhile here's some bits I wrote on the YBW forum when someone asked a similar question.

Quote
I went with the 2x 300W and am pleased with the results. The panels are mounted on their intended mounting holes (no modifications to the panels whatsoever, so the 10 year warranty remains intact). This is done by mounting each on two square aluminium profiles, with stainless bolts and nylon washers exactly as per solar panel specs. Those profiles are then bolted onto the stainless stern arch and give excellent support. They are not adjustable (I briefly looked at that, and the extra fuss and wobblyness aren't worth the hassle unless perhaps you sail in high latitudes). The panels themselves are rated to 160 knots wind speed for house roof installations, but the full installation is only good for roughly 100 knots before the aluminium profiles go and I suspect with the boat heeling and no house roof under the panels, the glass will simply blow out long before that. Panels can be strapped down to the big aft mooring cleats with ratchet straps over the top of both of them, should it come to that, but in such wind speeds the lost solar panels are probably the least of our worries.

Our panels do fit down the companionway hatch, but removing them and maneouvering them there in rising wind conditions would probably not go well, so for panels of this size that's a rather theoretical concern unless you get a long warning time ahead of bad weather.

You'll want to wire them in series, to get the high voltage into a MPPT controller (Victron MPPT 100/50 - good stuff) that lets you get maximum low light performance - that way they'll start producing useful output earlier in the morning and longer in the evening. The charger is to be installed as close as possible to the battery bank, so you have a short low-voltage (12V) run and a long high-voltage (less lossy) run from the panels. Victron has a calculator for wire sizes (XLS) somewhere that can be quite helpful.

Quote
More photos, as requested. After long and hard thinking, I decided the only sensible and visually inoffensive way was to attach the arch to the pushpit. So we welded four "horns" on the pushpit to keep it removable, and the arch slides on those and is affixed with a bolt through each. While the pushpit was at the welder, I made up some large stainless backing plates for its toerail bolts. The rest should be fairly obvious from the photos. It's all 25mm tubing, but the long pieces across the beam have a 22mm tube inside the 25mm, which according to the builder was stronger than any thick-wall tubing he could find, and I've learnt to trust the guy. Before mounting anything on it, I've done a few pull-ups in the center of the top beams and it did not invert. I'm not the slimmest

To reduce shear, there is one brace going from a tang to an inboard corner of the pushpit. This is not yet installed in the photo, but you can see the tang and a bungee cord in the approximate location. I can climb up the sides to clean the panels and it does not bend much. It's also a great place to lash more stuff onto! ;-)

Visually, I made sure the arch extends the angle of the forward vertical tube of the pushpit, so it wouldn't look funny and then raised it high enough so I could step off the aft deck (it's a CC, unlike yours) without mashing my head into a solar panel, and step through the transom as well. This puts it neatly behind the backstay, with the panels protruding forward (and aft) of it on both sides. I also made sure the panels were well within the bounding box of the hull, so the boat length wouldn't increase and the panels couldn't hit anything if maneuvering near tall objects (walls, pilings, etc.). It's wise to angle the panels slightly aft and outwards so the water can run off them and doesn't fall noisily on the transom (we sleep there). Panels are two LG Neon 300W 1.6x1m size.

The panels are attached with stainless bolts as per the LG installation manual, except with additional insulating nylon washers between the stainless bolts and the aluminium. The clever part (a friend came up with the idea) was how to clamp the profiles to the tubes. You can see the two plastic bridges around the tube, and a third one (with nuts held in place by a bit of hot-glue) is hot-glued to a piece of slim cable trunking and slid into the profile from the end until the holes line up. Then the bolts are tightened into those and the cable conduit simple pulled out with a tug, which breaks the hot-glue off cleanly. Looks nice and vastly cheaper than any square-to-tube clamps I could find.




(formerly) Sailing Songbird  ⛵️ Bavaria 40 Ocean (2001)

rbrtmccorkle

  • Second Mate
  • **
  • Posts: 26
  • Karma: +0/-0
  • Boat Model: Barvaria Ocean 42
  • Boat Year: 1999
Re: Arch for solar Panels
« Reply #2 on: December 30 2017, 16:39 »
Thank you for your insightful reply.  Looks like I have the 42 ft version of the same boat and I had not thought about attaching to the stern pulpits, but like the idea very much.

Some questions:

1.  The factory stern pulpits are not 2" stainless - so when you had the arch fabricated in 2" stock - it looks like you also had 2" pulpits fabricated?
2.  Any chance you have any drawings you would be willing to share?
3. My radar dome is on a post mounted aft of the stern Pulpits. I had been concerned about the following:
       A.  The possibility the the Arch and solar Pannels could in someway interfere with the radar?
       B.  The radar dome casting a shadow on the Pannels? 
       C. Any thoughts on making the height of the Arch higher or lower than the dome (I noticed your dome is mounted on the mast) but I'm trying to keep projects to minimum in order to get cruising as soon as possible).

Your boat seems ready to go or very near.  So would appreciate your insights.

Bob McCorkle
SV Chaos

Yngmar

  • Administrator
  • *****
  • Posts: 1594
  • Karma: +22/-2
  • Boat Model: 40 Ocean
  • Boat Year: 2001
Re: Arch for solar Panels
« Reply #3 on: December 30 2017, 18:53 »
1.  The factory stern pulpits are not 2" stainless - so when you had the arch fabricated in 2" stock - it looks like you also had 2" pulpits fabricated?

Everything is 25mm tubing (with an insert across the arch as described above). You don't need more unless you also want to use it for davits, then it needs to be much sturdier.

Quote
2.  Any chance you have any drawings you would be willing to share?

Just got some sketches that I gave the welder to give him an idea of what I want. I was of course there for every step of the build and it underwent several more steps of evolution during that. As nothing on a boat is ever straight, drawings with dimensions don't really work and when I suggested to make some, the welder (a very experienced guy) just said "please don't". We constructed  and aligned the thing in place, tack-welded it on the boat and then took it to his workshop to seam weld and polish. Happy to share the sketches I have.

Quote
3. My radar dome is on a post mounted aft of the stern Pulpits. I had been concerned about the following:
       A.  The possibility the the Arch and solar Pannels could in someway interfere with the radar?
       B.  The radar dome casting a shadow on the Pannels? 
       C. Any thoughts on making the height of the Arch higher or lower than the dome (I noticed your dome is mounted on the mast) but I'm trying to keep projects to minimum in order to get cruising as soon as possible).

That's awkward. Only choice is to have the radar above the arch and panels, as otherwise they would very much interfere with the radar. That means the fat blob of a radome will cast a shadow on the panels, defeating much of the point of building an arch in the first place. A better place for the radar would perhaps be the mast, although that has downsides too - ours sometimes gets caught by the Genoa, although usually shakes free and never did any damage to it. I've seen gimbaled radar mounts on the backstay, about halfway up, so less of a problem than on a pole.

Quote
Your boat seems ready to go or very near.

We've "gone" last June and are now in Portugal. The anchored picture above is in Culatra (near Faro) :)
(formerly) Sailing Songbird  ⛵️ Bavaria 40 Ocean (2001)

rbrtmccorkle

  • Second Mate
  • **
  • Posts: 26
  • Karma: +0/-0
  • Boat Model: Barvaria Ocean 42
  • Boat Year: 1999
Re: Arch for solar Panels
« Reply #4 on: December 31 2017, 18:28 »
This is so helpful - thank you and Happy New Year. 

I think I know somebody who could fabricate this and yes I've worked with wonderful welders in the past who only worked off conceptual drawings. 

I was thinking about Davit potential, but in truth given the real estate available on both our boats - I have a very small tender, on any serious passage it would be lashed to the bow, on shorter trips it can survive nicely either on the bow or being towed - so Davit's clearly fall on the nice to have list and there are many things that my outfitting budget could be better spent on.

Thanks again and Blue Skies and Fair Winds on your trip

Bob McCorkle
SV Chaos

rbrtmccorkle

  • Second Mate
  • **
  • Posts: 26
  • Karma: +0/-0
  • Boat Model: Barvaria Ocean 42
  • Boat Year: 1999
Re: Arch for solar Panels
« Reply #5 on: May 14 2018, 19:22 »
Back around the holidays - Jngmar was kind enough to share a concept diagram for Sail Arch (posted higher up in this string) that should work on my Ocean 42.  Well it took a while but this is what I did with Yngmar's concept. 

A big thank you to Yngmar.

Yngmar

  • Administrator
  • *****
  • Posts: 1594
  • Karma: +22/-2
  • Boat Model: 40 Ocean
  • Boat Year: 2001
Re: Arch for solar Panels
« Reply #6 on: May 14 2018, 19:39 »
Cool! Glad it worked out  :kewl
(formerly) Sailing Songbird  ⛵️ Bavaria 40 Ocean (2001)

rbrtmccorkle

  • Second Mate
  • **
  • Posts: 26
  • Karma: +0/-0
  • Boat Model: Barvaria Ocean 42
  • Boat Year: 1999
Re: Arch for solar Panels
« Reply #7 on: May 14 2018, 21:42 »
Now to start wiring the solar panels and Wind Generator

thanks again.

Kibo

  • Old Salt
  • *****
  • Posts: 276
  • Karma: +0/-0
  • Boat Model: Vision 46
  • Boat Year: 2014
Re: Arch for solar Panels
« Reply #8 on: June 12 2018, 16:17 »
Great photos, thanks to both.

I am having an arch for solar panels and wind gen fabricated this summer on my Vision 46. Will be very similar in design incorporating the pushpit rails as you both have. I sent photos and concepts to my welder and discussed with him before we left the boat in April so I am confident he will be able to fabricate to a similar style and standard. 

Will post photos once complete as it may help some aft cockpit boat owners too.
Ian
SV Kibo, 2014 Bavaria Vision 46

SorinCT

  • First Mate
  • ***
  • Posts: 68
  • Karma: +1/-0
  • Boat Model: Bavaria C36
  • Boat Year: 2005
Re: Arch for solar Panels
« Reply #9 on: June 21 2020, 17:32 »
I am planing also to install a solar arch on my C36. Plan is to incorporate the original pushpit with pivoting clamps (similar to bimini) and spread wide enough for 3 x 100W solar panels (1 would fit in between the aft shrouds). Also will install antennas and other equipment. The panels will be positioned as to cover 20 cm of the bimini when is stowed and also provide some overlap to prevent sun spots on the helmsman and rain.
Going to use 30x2 mm pipe.

Klausen

  • First Mate
  • ***
  • Posts: 54
  • Karma: +1/-0
  • Boat Model: Bavaria 37 cr
  • Boat Year: 2006
Re: Arch for solar Panels
« Reply #10 on: June 22 2020, 15:19 »
Hello,
I'm also planning to install a light arch (25mm) to my pushpit. Perhaps I get a used one and can modify it for my boat. I don't want it to be welded to the pushpit rail, that's why I'm looking for clamps. Are the bimini attachment elements stable enough for my project?
Regards
Klaus

HappyAfloat

  • First Mate
  • ***
  • Posts: 53
  • Karma: +2/-0
    • www.happyafloat.com
  • Boat Model: Bavaria 38
  • Boat Year: 2003
Re: Arch for solar Panels
« Reply #11 on: June 22 2020, 19:51 »
Ok, time to show my goal post style solar arch.


Klausen

  • First Mate
  • ***
  • Posts: 54
  • Karma: +1/-0
  • Boat Model: Bavaria 37 cr
  • Boat Year: 2006
Re: Arch for solar Panels
« Reply #12 on: June 23 2020, 09:42 »
I think this solution would also work on my boat!
Thanks
Klaus

Luna Azzurra

  • Swab
  • Posts: 6
  • Karma: +0/-0
  • Boat Model: Bavaria 42 Cruiser
  • Boat Year: 2005
Re: Arch for solar Panels
« Reply #13 on: March 16 2021, 15:48 »
I just installed an solar arch on our 42 cruiser.
We ordered it from rs-inox.com. They mounted it too.
We are more than happy with the final result. Have 5x 115 monocristal on now plus we can have the dinghy there as well.

Jeffatoms

  • Able Seaman
  • ****
  • Posts: 112
  • Karma: +0/-0
  • Boat Model: Ocean 38
  • Boat Year: 1998
Re: Arch for solar Panels
« Reply #14 on: March 23 2021, 03:03 »
Perfectly timed thread.  We too have been thinking long and hard about this topic.  Our goals may be too ambitious for our Bavaria 38 Ocean, but here they are:

Rear arch big enough and well located for:
A) 600W +/- solar
B) davit for dinghy and outboard
C) outboard lift
D) antenna array
E)room for an offset Hydrovane
F) safe distance from bbq
G)integrated into existing railing
H) lower support leg way down each side of transom
I) beefy stainless tubing (Sue's requirement)
J) not ugly or unsightly, tidy

I know, that's a big list.

Markus

  • First Mate
  • ***
  • Posts: 76
  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: Arch for solar Panels
« Reply #15 on: March 23 2021, 07:19 »
Perfectly timed thread.  We too have been thinking long and hard about this topic.  Our goals may be too ambitious for our Bavaria 38 Ocean, but here they are:

Rear arch big enough and well located for:
A) 600W +/- solar
B) davit for dinghy and outboard
C) outboard lift
D) antenna array
E)room for an offset Hydrovane
F) safe distance from bbq
G)integrated into existing railing
H) lower support leg way down each side of transom
I) beefy stainless tubing (Sue's requirement)
J) not ugly or unsightly, tidy

I know, that's a big list.

Good list  :)

Quick comments:
  • A lot of solar & antennas => try to avoid shading and go for the half-cut panels to minimize shading losses
  • I would rather beef up the pushpit deck attachments than install extra legs. They will get in the way eventually for something, if not already for the hydrovane. And those extra legs are usually not exactly eye-candy...

Jeffatoms

  • Able Seaman
  • ****
  • Posts: 112
  • Karma: +0/-0
  • Boat Model: Ocean 38
  • Boat Year: 1998
Re: Arch for solar Panels
« Reply #16 on: June 14 2021, 04:21 »
Again thanks to all who have posted this helpful dialog.  We have this slated for a 2022 or 23 project for our 1998 Ocean 38.  We plan to add more tilt back to incorporate davits too but to do so, we plan to replace all the stern hardware with thicker tubing to make it stronger and all inclusive, possibly coming as far forward as the side gates.  I sure appreciate the thoughtful dialog!!!

SorinCT

  • First Mate
  • ***
  • Posts: 68
  • Karma: +1/-0
  • Boat Model: Bavaria C36
  • Boat Year: 2005
Re: Arch for solar Panels
« Reply #17 on: October 18 2021, 16:47 »
For my 36 cruiser 2002 project is almost complete. I fitted 3 x 100W, SS solar arch and Victron 100-20 MMPT. Not entirely satisfied with the arch but we will see if any modifications are necessary as time passes. Wires were routed through the stainless pipes and entering the boat at the transom (wiring was not tidied-up when taking the photos :) ).

kavok

  • Able Seaman
  • ****
  • Posts: 189
  • Karma: +0/-8
  • Boat Model: 40 Cruiser
  • Boat Year: 2008
Re: Arch for solar Panels
« Reply #18 on: October 18 2021, 19:51 »
I just installed an solar arch on our 42 cruiser.
We ordered it from rs-inox.com. They mounted it too.
We are more than happy with the final result. Have 5x 115 monocristal on now plus we can have the dinghy there as well.
Fine.

kavok

  • Able Seaman
  • ****
  • Posts: 189
  • Karma: +0/-8
  • Boat Model: 40 Cruiser
  • Boat Year: 2008
Re: Arch for solar Panels
« Reply #19 on: October 18 2021, 19:54 »
For my 36 cruiser 2002 project is almost complete. I fitted 3 x 100W, SS solar arch and Victron 100-20 MMPT. Not entirely satisfied with the arch but we will see if any modifications are necessary as time passes. Wires were routed through the stainless pipes and entering the boat at the transom (wiring was not tidied-up when taking the photos :) ).
Ugly

SYJetzt

  • Old Salt
  • *****
  • Posts: 320
  • Karma: +11/-0
  • Boat Model: Cruiser 46
  • Boat Year: 2005
Re: Arch for solar Panels
« Reply #20 on: October 19 2021, 12:54 »
For my arch there is work in progress.
Main frame made of 40x2mm AISI316.
3x300W solar
Davit for dinghy (Rib 290 with mounted 25HP outboard, total 150kg)
Mast for wind-gen
Mast for radar
Antenna mount

Pretty huge, but solar extends the area of bimini to the aft, which is fine in the med for shading the cockpit.
We prefered  an separated design for arch and railing.
One photo shows my metalworker performing loadtest
See photos

SYJetzt

  • Old Salt
  • *****
  • Posts: 320
  • Karma: +11/-0
  • Boat Model: Cruiser 46
  • Boat Year: 2005
Re: Arch for solar Panels
« Reply #21 on: October 19 2021, 12:57 »
photo of load test

A & A

  • Cadet
  • *
  • Posts: 5
  • Karma: +0/-0
  • A & A
  • Boat Model: Vision 46
  • Boat Year: 2017
Re: Arch for solar Panels
« Reply #22 on: March 16 2023, 14:38 »
Great photos, thanks to both.

I am having an arch for solar panels and wind gen fabricated this summer on my Vision 46. Will be very similar in design incorporating the pushpit rails as you both have. I sent photos and concepts to my welder and discussed with him before we left the boat in April so I am confident he will be able to fabricate to a similar style and standard. 

Will post photos once complete as it may help some aft cockpit boat owners too.

Hi Kibo,

just bought a Vision 46 and planning to install an arch. Would be interesting to see the results and hear about the experiences from your project!

//Anders
Sail, sail, sail...