Blogging has taken a back seat for the last few months as life has kept me quite occupied. Now that the winter rainy season has set in, I have a bit more time to penning some thoughts. ##Laptop blues The cooling fan failed (again) on my laptop. Since this is the second failure of the cooling fan on this 10 year old laptop (within the span of a year),the decision was made not to replace the fan as the machine was probably not worth the effort. I was forced to fall back to the old Raspberry Pi Zero which was okay for most of my basic work, but on those rare occasions when I needed to run a full featured browser (for online banking etc.) running the Chromium browser would almost bring it to a stand still. I had no particular desire to purchase another laptop, consequently I decided to give the newer Rapsberry Pi 4 (2 GB ram) a shot. At USD $45, I figured it was worth the gamble since my needs were fairly modest. Thus far it has been rather surprising how well this little unit performs, although I must admit I set the bar pretty low since, as I mentioned earlier, my requirements are pretty simple. The Rpi was originally designed as a project board, but since that time improvements made to the soc (system on a chip) has allowed it to now serve nicely as a desktop unit. Also what was appealing was it's tiny energy footprint. As a comparison, I fired up my ancient behemoth desktop machine and checked its power consumption with a Kill-a-Watt meter. It dialed in at 120 watts whereas the Rpi was the featherweight at 5.5 watts. Things have come a long way in 10 years! ## Energy and the new normal "Public safety power shutoffs" in California has added an additional challenge to supplying our energy needs here in the sticks. Normally, if power has been disrupted because of storm damage or other factors, the power would be disrupted for perhaps a few hours. On one occasion during a storm, it was out for 40 hours. This year, the latest power shutoff left us without power for a week. Under ordinary circumstances we would have been okay since I do have a generator and our satellite internet is on solar, although the batteries seem to be fading. A problem arose when we lost our land line telephone network after a couple of days, which was a bit unnerving. Since we do not have any cell signal at our particular rural location, we would not receive any reverse 911 calls from the local authorities in the event of a fire in our area. AT&T, for obvious business reasons, is not maintaining their landline networks (nudging customers into wireless...insert choice expletive here ____) which is most likely the reason for their battery backup failure. Thankfully, we have Google Voice and Skype to use with our satellite internet which is probably the best fallback option considering our current circumstances. This means, of course, that our satellite modem and home network would need to remain active 24/7 during an outage. It's time to upgrade the solar by adding a couple more panels and perhaps a couple more batteries to the bank. Currently we have a single 255W panel and 2 6V golf cart batteries. After 6 years of use, the batteries are probably getting close to the end of their useful life, but I'll check them with a hydrometer to ascertain their health. Even if they are still healthy, it is not sufficient energy storage in the event of several days of rainy weather which is typical for this part of northern California in the winter. Although expensive, I might look at Lithium Iron Phosphate batteries as an option. For us, determining energy sufficiency seems to be a matter of setting priorities. Having some experience under our belt with regard to power outages, we have concluded that the most important line items are (not in order of priority): 1. Refrigeration 2. Heating/Cooling 3. Communications/Internet 4. Lighting 5. Water pumping Refrigeration is the tough one as the old fridge we have is an energy hog by today's standards. During some of the more brief power outages, the refrigerator stayed cold for several hours before we had to concern ourselves about the contents. If the need arises, I can connect it to the generator to keep it running. I may eventually purchase a chest freezer that can act as a fridge https://fridge0.branchable.com/ with one or two pv panels and its own battery. I generally keep a cord of firewood for the colder days although with the Mediterranean climate we enjoy in this area, it does not get terribly cold. Cooling is a different beast although we are also lucky that there are very few days that exceed 90°F (32°C), so we can probably make do with fans when required. I might look at a couple of 12V fans. Communications/Internet is critical which is, as I mentioned earlier, the big reason why I am upgrading our solar for more power and storage. The satellite modem alone consumes 30W and if you add in the router and other ancillary equipment, we might be approaching 50 to 60 watts which would need to run 24/7. For lighting, we of course have flashlights and candles, but I also have some 12V led bulbs that screw into standard sockets on some floor lamps. I have hacked a standard 120V ac plug to accommodate the lamp plug and to plug it into a 12V cigarette lighter adapter on an extra battery jumper power pack. The light pulls very little power and can probably run continuously for several days before requiring a recharge. Getting to the water department, for now, the generator connects to a power transfer switch at the main breaker panel which provides power to the well house. Putting this on solar would be a costly affair and will probably have to wait. Running the generator for the well house is only required for taking baths, doing dishes etc. Once the system is pressured up, we have sufficient water for flushing toilets several times without running the generator. Going completely off grid is a budget buster, but the goal is to be able to function during a protracted shutdown. It appears this is going to be the new normal in these parts. Stay tuned... Tags: computing, energy, wild-fires