Posts Tagged news
DIY Solar Panels – Steps Towards Building a Solar Panel
Posted by Admin in DIY Solar Panels on March 22nd, 2010
http://www.SolarEnergyGuide.net – DIY Solar Panels – Steps Towards Building a Solar Panel
If you are planning to build a DIY solar panel, the first step is to get yourself a good guide with plans from online retailers and start making one. You can go green while saving electricity at the same time without having to buy an expensive wind generator. You will be able to get all the materials needed plus the plans for less than $150.
An average Joe can make his own 1000W solar panel. Why not make one for yourself, too? You can even get your family in on it and make it a fun family project.
To get you started, you will first need the plans or the blueprint. Find a good place to work in. A regular garage will do. You do not need to get special tools. You can work with the simple tools that you already have. It would be great to have an extra pair of hands.
Look at the plans to find out what you need for the project. It should include a Direct Current (DC) motor. This will serve as your power generator. As the blades of your turbine spin, they turn the DC motor on which would then produce electricity.
Order the motor first for it takes a number of days to get it. This should not cause you much delay because you can use this time to start working on the other sections. You can already fashion the blades of your turbine. Wood is the preferred material for blades especially when making bigger machines. However, should you opt to, you can also use PVC.
If you intend to work with wood, make sure to get strong, good quality lumber. Your blades, especially the tips, should be able to withstand the force of the wind. Constructing the blades should not be complicated. Simply follow what your plans say. It is easy enough for you to make your own set in just one day, using only common tools.
As for the other parts, you will be surprised to know that you can get most of them for free. These include batteries, towers, and others included in your plans. You can piece all the parts together as soon as you get your motor. When that is done, it is now ready to be put up in the wind. Set it up at a place where it can stand at 15 feet above any structure within 300 feet. Your diy solar panel will now be able to produce free electricity.
DIY Solar Panels – Steps Towards Building a Solar Panel
solar system solar power solar panels wind turbine wind turbines wind energy earth4energy earth for energy earth 4 energy wind generator review scam instructions save money save energy save electricity energy bill eliminate power solar panel panels wind turbines turbine alternative efficient efficiency renewable system how to build electricity earth home house technology generate go green residential homemade made free home made heating cost
Duration : 0:2:16
A Homemade Solar Panel Can Power Your Home – 100% Workable Guarantee
Posted by Admin in HomeMade Solar Panels on March 15th, 2010
http://www.SolarEnergyGuide.net – A Homemade Solar Panel Can Power Your Home – 100% Workable Guarantee
Have you ever wondered if you were capable of assembling a homemade solar panel to provide electricity for your home?
It’s a great way to save money, use “green energy” that will be sustainable for generations, and learn about science while being handy around the house. How neat would it be if every neighbor on your block had a homemade solar panel on his roof or in his back yard? Be the first and inspire others!
Now, how can you make this happen?
These are some common questions that you might wonder about when you embark on learning how to make your own homemade solar panel: * Do you have the necessary tools and experience? * Is it dangerous to work with electricity? * How do I plug my solar panel into my house’s electric supply? * What about storing the energy so I can have power when it’s not sunny enough to activate my solar panel? * How much will my supplies cost and where can I get them?
The great news is that with the preponderance of information available through the internet today, you can make your own solar panels at home for under $200. This is a great weekend project and would be a wonderful learning experience to share with your children.
You will need to mount your solar panels somewhere where they can get a lot of light. This could be on the roof of your house, or somewhere in your yard. If you want to come close to fully powering your house, you may need to create a series of solar panels (one solar panel is about 4′ x 8′) but you can certainly get usable power with just one panel.
Like any new endeavor, it can take a while to learn how to make a solar panel, assemble the necessary materials, and put everything together and plug it in! It’s a good idea to cut your learning curve down by investing in some educational resources, like books or videos, that will teach you the step-by-step process for making solar panels cheaply, and safely. You can do it and it can be a lot of fun. After your first one, your subsequent solar panels will be much faster and easier to make.
If you want to discover the fastest, cheapest way to make a homemade solar panel, Emily can help you out. Find out what resources and materials you need to learn how to build a solar panel this weekend!
A Homemade Solar Panel Can Power Your Home – 100% Workable Guarantee
advantages alternative benefits bill build cell cells cheap conservation cost costs diy earth earth4energy earthenergy efficiency efficient electric electricity eliminate energy environment free fuel generate generator global green grid heat heater help home homemade house how instructions kits live make manufacturer market money natural panel panels plant power renewable residential resources review save scam sell solar sun system technology transformers turbine turbines wind windmills work
Duration : 0:2:16
Solar Panels – Build Your Own Solar Panel From Kits
Posted by Admin in How to Build Your Own Solar Panels on March 8th, 2010
http://www.SolarEnergyGuide.net – Solar Panels – Build Your Own Solar Panel From Kits
Many people think that it is very difficult, if not impossible, to build your own solar panels. They are then turned off by the prohibitively high costs of commercially available solar power setups, even though they may be interested in alternative energy. Now, when talking about the decision to build your own solar panels from scratch, the difficulty is indeed high, and most of these projects are too small for practical use. However, there are actually supplies that are available that make it possible to partially construct your very own sun-powered electricity setup.
Kits like these are complete in themselves, containing everything that a do-it-yourself enthusiast would need to build a fully functional power system for home use. Apart from yielding a working setup, these are also invaluable for teaching users the basics on how these setups work and are built. These kits are not that difficult to find, which may come as a surprise to some of you. Simply doing a little research on the Internet is often enough to turn up a couple of sources of the supplies you will need. Among these are such reputable companies as GE, which is selling equipment at reasonable prices.
What good would one or two photovoltaic electric panels built from kits do for you, you may ask? Well, even if the panels you set up are not quite large enough in scale to take you completely off the power grid, they will surely help nonetheless. Powering even just a couple of lights and appliances with free, renewable solar energy is going to help both your power bill and the environment in the long run. This is precisely why more and more people are becoming interested in learning how to build your own solar panels.
In comparison to premade sheets, these kits are less expensive and help to reduce the necessary initial outlay for the setups. Hence, they can more easily pay back their own costs, and you will start saving money faster. Even novices can take advantage of these packages since they are designed to be not too difficult to put together. Assembly of a panel from a certain package is a fairly short project that should not take more than a day or two, at the most. This also means that you can start using your arrangement to power your devices quickly enough, even though you have to build it yourself. This makes these kits a really feasible alternative to more expensive ready-made systems. Learning how to build your own solar panels is definitely a cost-effective option.
People interested in solar energy but leery of the high costs of ready-made setups should really consider investing in these kits. Build your own solar panels easily, and start living your dream of a cleaner, greener lifestyle with alternative energy.
Tired of high electric bills? Discover how thousands of families are using homemade solar power systems to power their homes
Build Your Own Solar Panels From Kits
advantages alternative benefits bill build cell cells cheap conservation cost costs diy earth earth4energy earthenergy efficiency efficient electric electricity eliminate energy environment free fuel generate generator global green grid heat heater help home homemade house how instructions kits live make manufacturer market money natural panel panels plant power renewable residential resources review save scam sell solar sun system technology transformers turbine turbines wind windmills work
Duration : 0:2:16
Do-It-Yourself Solar Panels – a Cheaper Home Energy Solution
Posted by Admin in Do it Yourself Solar Panels on March 1st, 2010
http://www.SolarEnergyGuide.net – Do-It-Yourself Solar Panels – a Cheaper Home Energy Solution
There are already several do-it-yourself solar panels that have been made accessible to the public whether over the net or in the actual market. The availability of these has also been incorporated with devices wherein you can study and learn the production, planning, and fabrication of electricity derived from raw sunlight. This has already become a new trend as a renewable supply of energy made available to everybody. Now, we can use heat from the rays of the sun and convert it into usable power. With the help of an appropriate device, we can transform this heat to electricity, helping us save about eighty percent off our monthly electric bills.
Though ready-made panels are indeed just as available in the market, the downside to it is their cost. Prices range from $2000 to $3000 as compared to do-it-yourself ones that are priced only at around $200. Surely, at about over a thousand dollars difference, the do-it-yourself solar panels are hands down more preferable, especially when we know that they come with their own do-it-yourself guides nowadays.
These guides teach you the exact steps in an illustrated manner on how you can go about building your own renewable energy system to tap on sunlight for your electricity needs at home. Not only so, you will learn how to do this affordably.
Once you have already installed them on your roof or backyard, you will also have already started generating your very own electricity. Almost everybody has a lot of, or even just enough, free space on the roof or backyard to make room for these power generating devices.
These house areas or locations are the ideal spots to put them on since it is these areas that are usually most open to direct sunlight and one can easily install the solar panels there. For those who happen to have houses that are too small to accommodate or consume all of the excess electricity the do-it-yourself solar panels generate, the “surplus” energy can actually be sold to local utility companies and rechanneled to other households in the neighborhood, thereby generating income for you and your family as well.
Tired of high electric bills? Discover how thousands of families are using homemade solar power systems to power their homes!
Do-It-Yourself Solar Panels – a Cheaper Home Energy Solution
advantages alternative benefits bill build cell cells cheap conservation cost costs diy earth earth4energy earthenergy efficiency efficient electric electricity eliminate energy environment free fuel generate generator global green grid heat heater help home homemade house how instructions kits live make manufacturer market money natural panel panels plant power renewable residential resources review save scam sell solar sun system technology transformers turbine turbines wind windmills work
Duration : 0:2:16
Splinter Sees `Phenomenal’ Opportunities for Solar Power: Video
Posted by Admin in Solar Power Panels on February 4th, 2010
Jan. 28 (Bloomberg) — Mike Splinter, chief executive officer at Applied Materials Inc., talks with Bloomberg’s Margaret Brennan about opportunities in the solar and renewable energy markets.
Splinter, speaking at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, also discusses the outlook for the semiconductor industry. (Source: Bloomberg)
Duration : 0:2:42
2007 Earth Keeper Energy Summit: Hundreds reduce power use
Posted by Admin in Reduce Energy Usage on January 27th, 2010
(Marquette, Michigan) – Business owners, clergy and homeowners from across northern Michigan were given numerous tips on reducing their utility bills during the 2007 Earth Keeper Energy Summit including the latest on an upcoming vote in the state legislature that would send wind-generated electricity to all residents.
About 100 people attended the day-long conference on Wednesday June 13, 2007 in Marquete, Michigan sponsored by the Superior Watershed Partnership in cooperation with the Cedar Tree Institute. The Marquette-based non-profits founded the Earth Keeper Initiative in 2004.
Most of those attending said they plan to join nearly 500 northern Michigan businesses, churches, temples and homes that recently began cutting energy costs and are expected to save millions of dollars in power and water costs over the next three years as part of the new Earth Keeper conservation project, according to Carl Lindquist, executive director of the Superior Watershed Partnership in Marquette.
The Earth Keeper Initiative has numerous ongoing environmental projects including the annual Earth Day clean sweeps across northern Michigan that have collected about 370 tons of household hazardous waste for recycling or proper disposal. The Earth Keepers have 140 participating churches/temples and a volunteer army of over 400 people.
“We are taking all the energy of the Earth Keepers across the Upper Peninsula and we are focusing that energy on energy conservation and climate change because that is where it all starts,” Lindquist told participants
Two senior members of the Sharon Lutheran Church council in Bessemer drove the three hours to Marquette to attend the energy summit to take home ideas on reducing water and power bills in the 75-year-old church while protecting the planet.
“We need an energy audit – we’ve looked for a long time for someone who does this and we haven’t found anyone,” said Arline Waurio of Bessemer, who also plans to have an energy audit of an 80-acre family farm that she manages. “I am on a limited budget – however I can save energy I will do it.”
Retired teacher Betsy Slabaugh of Bessemer said “just conserving the earth’s resources is so important – I have an awareness about saving the earth’s resources and I try to pass that on to everybody.”
Four churches and one parish house in the western U.P. spend about $50,000 a year on energy, a bill the pastor wants to reduce.
“I believe it’s very important for our congregations to take a leading role in the whole awareness of environmental issues and consequences,” said Pastor Francis Strong, a pastor at Christ Lutheran Parish – a group of four churches in Ironwood. “I am looking for ways for our churches to save money by being more efficient.”
The one-year-old Northern Michigan University EarthKeeper Student Team spread the word about the energy summit around campus and that attracted several current and former students.
“I am into alternative energies and I am interested in how people are using their alternative energies in the Upper Peninsula,” said Birmingham, MI native Jennifer Riley, 23, who recently graduated from Northern Michigan University with a major in environmental conservation.
“We use so much energy with the way we live, and with global warming – it’s terrible – and informing the public is the first step,” said Riley who took classes in solar and wind power.
One of the most popular exhibits demonstrated various types of energy saving lightbulbs. The first 35 people at the conference were given compact florescent lightbulbs.
Participants heard from several groups that do no-cost and low-cost energy audits including Michigan Interfaith Power and Light.
“Dollars saved on energy” can be spent on humanitarian projects or prevent important programs from being cut.
Energy conservation saves money “that can be directed for feeding the hungry, paying just salaries and advancing your mission,” said Father Charles Morris, director of Michigan Interfaith Power and Light.
The energy audits can have a big impact on the strained budgets of some of Michigan’s oldest and biggest churches.
Congregations in inner cities, and rural areas, inhabit the oldest and most energy inefficient buildings yet they serve the areas of greatest human need and have the fewest resources coming in – it’s a triple whammy,” said Rev. Morris, who has wind turbines that power part of the St. Elizabeth Catholic Church and solar water heaters at his home in Wyandotte, MI
Schools, government buildings, and businesses can save energy and money by watching “the more mundane things” and using preventative maintenance check lists.
“Some of the best things you can do is just keeping system operating efficiently – the savings really multiply fast when you just keep things operating up to snuff – like keeping thermostats set right keep boilers tuned up,” said Kevin Cook of Rebuild Michigan.
The president of an Upper Peninsula company in a wind power partnership encouraged participants to ask their legislators to support the Michigan Renewable Portfolio Standard (RPS).
“The (RPS) would require utilities across Michigan to buy power and diversify the way we make and use power in this country – 23 states already have that law and Michigan does not,” said Rich VanderVeen, president of Mackinaw Power.
“This bill would give the authority to the Michigan Public Service Commission to require the utilities to move forward” on wind power and level the playing field for independent power producers, VanderVeen said.
The Michigan House Energy Committee is expected to vote on the RPS next Wednesday (June 20, 2007) and go before the entire House by the Fourth of July, followed by senate action, VanderVeen said.
“I hope one of the outcomes of this energy summit is a united voice to Michigan legislators to support renewable energy,” said VanderVeen, adding northern Michigan lawmakers understand wind power would have a “social, ecological and financial benefit to Marquette and the Upper Peninsula.
VanderVeen said the Upper Peninsula Power Company (UPPCO) has been supportive of wind energy but the idea has met resistance from the Detroit Edison and Consumers Energy power companies.
“The incumbent utilities in the lower Peninsula have opposed this – they don’t like competition – they want to run the show themselves,” said VanderVeen, although his company currently has a “pilot project” with Consumers Energy “that’s not a very good deal for the independent power producers.”
The Mackinac City Wind Farm is owned by a partnership and has two wind turbines that have been operating since December 2001 that have “put out more than 15 million kilowatt hours” in electricity, VanderVeen said. “The wind turbines have operated 98 percent of the time.”
Michigan’s only other wind turbine is owned by Traverse City Light and Power, he said.
VanderVeen would like to see the three wind turbines in Michigan increased to 2,500 high-tech wind turbines built in areas that are windy and close to the power grid.
“The power goes right on the grid, so everyone in Michigan gets a little bit of that,” through an agreement with Consumer’s Energy and the International Grid Company,” VanderVeen said.
“We are putting out good clean power with no emissions,” VanderVeen said.
“The U.S. Department of Energy thinks we could put out as much as 5,000 megawatts of wind power and that would be enough for 250,000 homes and it would offset three tons of coal per home,” VanderVeen said.
Participants heard details about a federally funded program in Michigan that provides tips and resources on energy conservation for new construction projects, energy assessments for homeowners and valuable help for low-income residents.
“We received a grant to replace 115 furnaces in Michigan,” said T.J. Brown, project coordinator for Northern Options in Marquette, one of eight non-profit energy demonstration centers across Michigan that receive federal funds through the state.
“This is the third year of the program and in the U.P. we have 30 furnaces that are being replaced – we get our referrals through the Salvation Army, Big Brothers, Big Sisters, and community action agencies,” Brown said, adding they give no-charge workshops on weather-proofing, energy conservation, and other topics to schools, churches and civic clubs.
The bishops/leaders of nine faith traditions signed the Earth Keeper Covenant in 2004 pledging to actively protect the environment and reach out to American Indian tribes.
“This conference today is like a flower that has bloomed out of years of work,” said Rev. Jon Magnuson, executive director of the Cedar Tree Institute and Earth Keeper Initiative co-founder. “We feel something very, very important is happening and we are a part of it.”
The Earth Keeper team has at least two members from each of nine faith traditions (Catholic, Episcopal, Lutheran, Presbyterian, United Methodist Church, Unitarian Universalist, Baha’i, Jewish, and Zen Buddhist). The Keweenaw Bay Indian Community is a sponsor of the annual Earth Keeper Clean Sweep.
For more information contact the Superior Watershed Partnership at 906-228-6095 (or Earth Keeper volunteer media advisor Greg Peterson at 906-475-5068).
The Superior Watershed Partnership
http://www.superiorwatersheds.org
The Cedar Tree Institute:
http://www.cedartreeinstitute.com/
The Lake Superior Interfaith Communication Network:
http://www.lakesuperiorinterfaith.com/
Earth Keeper TV:
http://earthkeepers.blip.tv/
Earth Keeper Energy Summit related websites:
The Michigan Interfaith Power and Light
http://www.miipl.org/
Great Waters
http://www.greatwaters.net/
Wind Power website- Michigan projects
http://www.awea.org/projects/michigan.html
Mackinaw Power
http://www.mackinawpower.com
Duration : 0:9:50
alternative fuel
Posted by Admin in Alternate Fuels on January 27th, 2010
a newscast of a man who may have not only found a cure for cancer but an alternative to fossil fuels as well!
Duration : 0:2:57
Solar panels save homeowner cash
Posted by Admin in DIY Solar Panels on November 25th, 2009
A Myers Park man says installing solar panels on his roof has saved him hundreds of dollars in electricity costs.
Duration : 0:2:2