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Free handy facts on bank panel

by piggy_banks_source

bank-truck Free handy facts on bank panel

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bank-truck Free handy facts on bank panel

{ 12 comments }

rossng11 November 16, 2010 at 8:37 pm

If you do not have anti-virus currently, download Avira (new version 8) http://www.free-av.com/This sounds like spyware, so download:http://www.spywareterminator.com/http://www.safer-networking.org/ (spybot, also use immunise feature)http://free.grisoft.com/doc/download-free-anti-spyware/Scan and remove what they find.

Openthathouse.com November 17, 2010 at 9:04 am

Get a new appraisal. Than divide the new appraisal to your current loan amount. if under 80% than refinance. Now you can take your equity in the home and buy down your rate. So lets say you had a rate of 5.5 when you purchased the house. Well guess what you can do the same but it will cost you. If you stick urself into a 30 year like I am sure you are going to do. Than spending the xtra cash on buying down the rate wont hurt you and you get away from PMI. Stay away from Helocs since they act like a credit card. Good luck!

Eva November 17, 2010 at 8:55 pm

um… she prob doesnt have a designer design all her necklaces that she wears on antm. lol….

Amy November 18, 2010 at 8:40 am

You need to calculate how much power you need. Take the watts times the number of hours used a day, that will be watt hours. 60W x 4 hours = 240wh. Find out how many sun hours are available where you will be, keep in mind a lot of places have half of the hours in the winter than in the summer, so use the lower number if this will be used in the winter. http://www.altestore.com/howto/Tools-Calculators-Reference/Reference-Materials/Solar-Insolation-Data-USA-Cities/a35/. 240Wh / 5 sun hours = 48 watts. Add 30% for losses = 62W panel needed. You never want to use more than half the battery power, so multiply 240Wh times 2, add 30% for losses, divide by 12V system = 52ah battery bank.Or go to an off-grid calculator like http://www.altestore.com/store/calculators/off_grid_calculator/.Panels, batteries, and systems are generally grouped into nominal voltage, 6V, 12V, 24V, etc. A 12V battery is actually about 14.5V, 12V panel is about 20V. But because they are all nominal 12V, they are designed to work together.You then need an inverter to convert the 12V DC to 120V AC.

roderick_young November 18, 2010 at 8:55 pm

Are you sure you wouldn’t rather just use a NiMH battery charger that plugs into your cigarette lighter, and put the AA battery into your LED light?It’s certainly possible to put a dropping resistor between the 12V battery and your 1.5V light to make it work, but it would be a bit of work if you don’t already know what you’re doing. If you have an electrical engineer friend, they can get a DVM to measure the current drawn by your light, then help you go shopping for the right value resistor at (say) Radio Shack.

AVDADDY November 19, 2010 at 8:26 am

Hard to go wrong w/ Samsung.

billrussell42 November 19, 2010 at 8:21 pm

this is a very large installation! 100 HP is 75 kW, not counting for losses, which will get you to about 100kW.You need to decide how long you will run the motor on batteries on days with no sun or wind. Every 8 hours without sun or wind multiplies the number of batteries. For 5 days, it’s a huge number.For example, suppose you buy expensive 100 amp-hr batteries. And you only let then discharge 50%. Then you will get 1kW-hr out of one battery. To get 75 kW for one hour, you will need 75 of these. for 10 hours, 750 of them. for 100 hours (4 days) you get to 7500 of them!that’s a large building full of batteries. And a staff of people to maintain them and replace them as needed.$300 each x 7500 is $2 million. Multiply by 5 for chargers and storage space. $10 million.That’s not mentioning the solar arrays and wind turbines.

Sumpthinspec02 November 20, 2010 at 8:23 am

Since the bank is the seller I am assuming you are purchasing a foreclosed property. Many times when you buy a foreclosed property you buy the property as is and any repairs are at your expense. Someone should have told you this before you ever even put an offer on the house. It sounds like the repairs needed are so serious that your lender will not approve a mortgage until those repairs are done. There is nothing illegal or shady about what is happening here. You simply were not properly informed on the details of this transaction. If this were a normal sell instead of a foreclosed sell you would be able to negotiate with the seller or even ask them to make the repairs. But as it stands right now you have three choices either walk away from the deal, see if the selling bank will negotiate the price based on the cost of the repairs or pay for the repairs (not likely but you can try), or pay for the repairs yourself.

sam19000 November 20, 2010 at 8:44 pm

lets start with basics the solar power supplies DC and it is running all morning, the power it supplies not as much as the wind turbine so the controller and the power it supplies mostly constant becasue the sun changes slowly the wind turbine supplies AC with diffrent frequncy so it needs to be converted into DC then converted back to AC with 60 or 50 Hz frequency, the power it supplies much higher than the solar power and the wind changes frequently so the ammount of power it supplies isnt the same so that the controller needs to monitor that power in order to charge the batteries

squidge28 November 21, 2010 at 8:33 am

I am making the assumption that this CT senses the load for a bank of capacitors that is used for power factor correction. If that is true…A three phase load is typically balanced closely enough to use one of the three phases to trigger power factor correction. The detection circuit closely monitors the power factor on the one phase. When correction is needed on the one phase, it is very likely the other two phases will need correction as well. So when the circuit triggers, the capacitors are applied on all three phases; not just the one being monitored. The simple answer is that it is less expensive to monitor one phase than it is to monitor all three.

steve c November 21, 2010 at 9:08 pm

Really depends on the damage.A good panel beater can fix anything it just depends on whether its so bad that it will take a lot of time and materials. It can work out cheaper just to replace the part. Remember you might still have to pay a bodyman to paint the new panel to match after you buy it + fitting.Really depends on the damage.

Sky Blue November 22, 2010 at 8:41 am

It sounds like something isn’t right here. Are you sure this isn’t a scam?I have two accounts with one with a very low balance just in case it is a scam.Be careful!

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