solar charging for your electronics

jasonZ

Gunny Sergeant
Full Member
Minuteman
Jul 12, 2008
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independence, kansas 67301
Does anybody use a solar charger for your ballistics handheld? I've got a LR class coming up and I use my Android phone for ballistics computing. I'm contemplating trying to find a solar charger that will work with my phone to keep OT charged all day.

Anybody use one or have any thoughts on the subject. I know that it can be done with out this, but it makes life simpler! Thanks for your thoughts/advice, Jason
 
Re: solar charging for your electronics

I had one from REI for a while, it was nice an handy but took almost 2 full days to recharge my Ipod. For your purpose I would take a look at the Energizer and Duracell back up battery packs. You can recharge them via USB and they come with an array of adapters for phones, ipods, etc. Work very well in my experience.
 
Re: solar charging for your electronics

Brunton foldable solar panels. Very tough stuff, works great and will even power some small electronics like phones and GPS without even having to recharge the device. Waterproof.
Don't let the MSRP scare you on the Brunton site, I got mine from Amazon on sale for ~50% off - currently they are not on sale, but go on sale there frequently.

Might be too much power for just keeping a phone charged, but it will likely run the phone without even a battery in it. They also have lower wattage sets.

http://store.bruntonoutdoor.com/portable-power/panels-and-chargers/solaris-26/

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000GEFFBO

madd0c
 
Re: solar charging for your electronics

Sounds good fella's. I may have needed to be more specific on my op. I did Google this topic and found a ton of em. I was looking for more of an "I've used this one and its held up" kind of thing. I just saw commercial for the goalzero setup right after posting this topic. I'll have to decide on something before too long so I have time to order it. Thanks for the possible guys.
 
Re: solar charging for your electronics

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: madd0c</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Brunton foldable solar panels. Very tough stuff, works great and will even power some small electronics like phones and GPS without even having to recharge the device. Waterproof.
Don't let the MSRP scare you on the Brunton site, I got mine from Amazon on sale for ~50% off - currently they are not on sale, but go on sale there frequently.

Might be too much power for just keeping a phone charged, but it will likely run the phone without even a battery in it. They also have lower wattage sets.

http://store.bruntonoutdoor.com/portable-power/panels-and-chargers/solaris-26/

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000GEFFBO

madd0c </div></div>

Crap! Another piece of gear I can't live without. The wife is going to be pissed.
 
Re: solar charging for your electronics

Solar is all good until it's overcast or night. I had the same dilemna and ended up going with a AA "emergency" recharger. It works great and I already carry a cache of AA's for my PVS-14 and other widgets anyway. Plus, the price was right. I am hoping that Motorola figures out how to make my cell battery actually power the phone all day at some point though.

http://www.google.com/products/cata...krSITfKtMcqSgQeL99jSDQ&sqi=2&ved=0CFMQ8gIwAw#
 
Re: solar charging for your electronics

We've used a few of them in the field when power was not an option, but we've found that unless you have really nice bright sunny conditions even larger units provide very little power. If you read the reviews on most of the smaller units say at REI etc. you find the constant theme is most of them won't power or charge a device in any reasonable amount of time. What good is a solar charger that takes 2 days to charge an ipod? Granted if you are backpacking for 2 weeks it may be the only viable option but most people are very disappointed in them for everyday type of use.

I have the brunton 26watt fold-able solar charger mentioned above, and if it's not sunny out it won't charge or power something as simple as an ipod with any efficiency. In full sun it puts out pretty impressive power, but in anything less it's just worthless.

What you might look into is either having a couple spare phone batteries, or perhaps some of the external batteries (some have solar charging options as well), you can get a 4000+ mah USB units pretty cheap now that's not much bigger than the phone itself.

There are also several options for USB type chargers that take AA batteries, and you can just plug your phone into that and keep a bunch of spare AA's. Similar to what Here2Learn posted, I've seen 4 AA versions under $10 on ebay. I always have a couple of them floating around in case they are needed. Very handy and cost effective.
 
Re: solar charging for your electronics

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: TacticalJ</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Does anybody use a solar charger for your ballistics handheld? I've got a LR class coming up and I use my Android phone for ballistics computing. I'm contemplating trying to find a solar charger that will work with my phone to keep OT charged all day.

Anybody use one or have any thoughts on the subject. I know that it can be done with out this, but it makes life simpler! Thanks for your thoughts/advice, Jason </div></div>

Now you know why I have an FDAC and MDM in my databook.
wink.gif


Love my iPhone, but I don't trust anything with electronics in the field. I have broken military radios, so anything less is very suspect.
 
Re: solar charging for your electronics

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: JoeyAld</div><div class="ubbcode-body">I use one of these to charge my phone all the time..

http://www.powerfilmsolar.com/foldable-solar-chargers/usb-aa.php

Folds up small.. light weight..and has two AA's just in case you need them. </div></div>

This looks pretty good and good reviews. Not a bank breaker. Thanks for this info

Link to Amazon http://amzn.com/B001RMBHMK
 
Re: solar charging for your electronics

Now that's the kind of feedback I'm looking for. I'm pretty sure that we'll be under the sun, if it's out, but you never know what the weather will be like here in Kansas.

Now with that being said, this is not a life or death issue, however, I figure whatever I get would be something that will end up in the go bag and useful if there was some type of "collapse" or something like that!

It sounds like I should probably just get a AA powered device and a solar charger to have both. My HTC Desire uses a lot of battery power when it's constantly on!
 
Re: solar charging for your electronics

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: TacticalJ</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Now that's the kind of feedback I'm looking for. I'm pretty sure that we'll be under the sun, if it's out, but you never know what the weather will be like here in Kansas.

Now with that being said, this is not a life or death issue, however, I figure whatever I get would be something that will end up in the go bag and useful if there was some type of "collapse" or something like that!

It sounds like I should probably just get a AA powered device and a solar charger to have both. My HTC Desire uses a lot of battery power when it's constantly on! </div></div>

Your telling me.

It would be a handy little piece of kit however depending on which side of the pond you are. That thing would shine in Iraq!!!! It felt like you were only feet from the sun at times there!
 
Re: solar charging for your electronics

Well from the research I've done, it looks like for a few days worth of use, an extra battery or a battery powered charger is the way to go. It seems that one would have to leave a solar setup charging all day and possibly to no avail! I'd say from reviews and articles, the goalzero setup is it, but I'm still not sure I want to spend $100 on it. We'll see. Thanks guys
 
Re: solar charging for your electronics

Tom Lyons (or was it Lions, I forget) was offering solar chargers built into SOPMOD stocks. I'm sure if size/weight is a problem he could build a custom charger for you.

However I really think just carrying some spare batteries is the way to go.
 
Re: solar charging for your electronics

Forget solar unless you're going to be in a place with no access to batteries at all for an extended period, like trekking in the Himalayas, Patagonia, or a similar remote location, and you need to charge camera batteries. For anything else, get one of the universal-style chargers which takes AA batteries.

Solar is a viable option only when there are NO other options. That isn't often the case for portable equipment.
 
Re: solar charging for your electronics

Powerfilm 10 watt solar panel
Brunton Inspire
Goal 0 Guide 10 (AA/AAA)

This is a great setup that works very well. It takes 4 hours to charge the Brunton to full capacity but the Inspire will charge my Droid X twice on a full charge.

The reason for the long charge time is the DC/DC converter 1amp @ 5v = 5 watts.
 
Re: solar charging for your electronics

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Lindy</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Forget solar unless you're going to be in a place with no access to batteries at all for an extended period, like trekking in the Himalayas, Patagonia, or a similar remote location, and you need to charge camera batteries. For anything else, get one of the universal-style chargers which takes AA batteries.

Solar is a viable option only when there are NO other options. That isn't often the case for portable equipment.

</div></div>

With how things are going and how I percieve them as going to go a solar charger might be a good option for a deployment. Remote FOB's/COP's and the "do more with less" since they are going to drasticaly cut our budget will take its toll. It was already a challenge to get stuff to the COP I was at last year and our budget was really good!