jimthree wrote:This is a subject of great interest to me too! While I think everything Adafruit do is built of awesome, a $17 charge controller (plus whatever for panel and batteries) is not my ideal solution for a $4 chip, and I think OP would share the same view. In my use case, I need to make about 10 stand alone solar powered sensors. I don't have $170 to drop on the charge controller. My sensors read from the analogue pin, connect to wifi, POST the results to a server then deep sleep for an hour.
Right now I'm considering two options for the charger, and I'm looking for any advice about which one might be best to use.
For the battery, I will probably use a 18650 as they are easily available and cheap. I'll use a solar panel for power, but I'm not sure what specs, that kind of depends on the charger.
The two chargers that I've found that might be useful are:
http://www.aliexpress.com/item/Free-Shi ... 61008.html
or
http://www.aliexpress.com/item/Free-Shi ... 58256.html
The 18650 battery is 3.7v so I can either use a boost controller to lift it to 5v, then I could use it with a NODEmcu style board, or I could step the voltage down a bit to 3.3v and use a bare ESP8266
Paying no more than a couple of $ or £ (in my case) for the charger is what I'm thinking of. Can anyone see anything at this range that might work for Solar charging a battery, capable of powering an ESP8266 for about 20secs every hour?
I also need to find out more about MPPT and how important it is to all this!
Jim
Hi Jim,
I agree with your sentiments re ideally paying no more than a couple of $ for the charger, and i've been meaning to try this so you spurred me on to give it a go. Here it is:
Thats one of those 43cent charger modules you linked to, with a 5.5V 0.66W 120mA Solar Panel, a 240mAh LIPO cell, a MAX604 voltage regulator and an ESP-12 with a BME280 sensor. The ESP is publishing the temp/pressure/humidity to Thingspeak once a minute to here, and deepSleep'ing for the rest of the time.
The 240mAh cell is way to small for serious use. Its presently charged up to 4.0v and by my calculations it might last for about 60 hours if there was no charge from the solar cell, so a couple of cloudy days and its toast.
Come back here on Thursday to see how its doing, i'll try to put it somewhere sunny...