… since I had a proper Sunday?
Regular readers of this rubbish will recall that back in the Good Old Days Sunday was a Day Of Rest. And not only that, but a lie-in too. And there were some Sundays when I didn’t show before midday too.
Those days seemed to be long-gone, didn’t they? Several times just recently I’ve been wide away on a Sunday long before my usual rising time of 07:00.
So what happened today that I was asleep until … errr … 10:13?
And a good sleep too. I was away on my travels too – carrying on from yesterday round here somewhere outside, with with three other people. All of them pseudo-priests, and were in fact three young lads whom I knew when I worked in Brussels.
10:15 in here, breakfast over by 10:45, and then a sit-down for an hour or so. Far too late to go for the baguette at the magasin de presse so I reckoned a quick stroll down the hill.
But what the …! What’s going on here?
Hordes of people clinging to various vantage points looking at what looks like a ship blowing off thousands of gallons of water for some reason or another.
I had to go and check that out. Maybe it was a shipwreck or something (I’d seen a ship on the horizon in the dark last night);
But I didn’t get too far down the hill though.
The Marité might not have been at home (she’s been gone for a few days now) but lots of other people were there on her quayside.
Some kind of military vehicle display I reckon.
So cancel the baguette I nipped down to the fritkot for a bag of chips and threw all of my plans into the air.
Some kind of military vehicle display it was indeed.
Probably about 20 wartime vehicles all told, of all shapes, sizes and descriptions. Tanks, jeeps, lorries and motorcycles, and so I had a good wander around.
Quite a lot of stuff that I would have happily taken home in a heartbeat.
But pride of place anywhere, anyhow and on any occasion has to go to the magnificent Welbike.
Designed to fold to fit into a parachute supply container, these were used by paratroopers and resistance fighters all over Occupied Europe.
A brilliant idea, but the Villiers 98cc two-stroke engine was hopelessly underpowered for the rough terrain and many were abandoned by the paratroopers as an unnecessary encumbrance once the War opened out.
Naturally, this part of France, not too far from the D-Day beaches, would be where you might expect the odd one or two to surface every now and again.
From there I wandered off down the quayside and onto the harbour mole to see if I could see anything that was going on where that ship might have been.
It had cleared off, so it can’t have been a shipwreck, but nevertheless I had a superb view of the Iles de Chausey and so I gave the new zoom lens a run-out.
And the verdict? Not as good as I would have liked, but I’ve had much worse than this. And it IS automatic focus.
But it did occur to me that I’ve not taken a photograph of the port of Granville from this vantage point yet.
I was over there where that black triangle was the other day, and you can see one of the boats that go to the Iles de Chausey in the bay next to it.
To the left of centre are the lock gates for the commercial port. It’s a tidal basin so when the tide is going out they close the gates so that the water stays in and the big ships like Pluto and Victress can stay afloat.
I waled all the way back to here via the Coastal Path. First time that I’d done that.
There’s a good view right back across the port and the town from up here, and you can see the ship repairer’s yard too. They have a novel way of hoisting ships out of the water.
So I carried on back here but couldn’t see anything to suggest what that ship or whatever it was might have been doing.
And had a rest when I arrived. It was a long walk back here – 4.8 kilomtres in fact according to the Fitbit.
Tea was pizza tonight (well, it IS Sunday) and I had a chat with Liz on the internet. Now another walk and an early night. Start again at 07:00 tomorrow.
We have church bells going off and a choir singing in the vicinity tonight.
Looks like I have a bad solar controller. It rejects every battery as bad. I just ordered a more basic controller. Two that arrived the other day are faulty. I can’t get either to raise the cut off voltage above 11.3v. Sure, it’ll go as low as 9v but that’s useless. 3 solar controllers headed for the trash.
Trouble is since everything comes from China, it’s hard to differentiate the good from the bad.
The trouble with a lot of this gear is that it’s not designed for what you are trying to do with it (that’s not to say that it isn’t rubbish of course – I don’t really know). But I do know that a cheap solution usually works out to be more expensive in the long run and that there’s no substitute for quality.
Buying off eBay is always fraught with problems anyway no matter where it’s from and what it’s about.
You’ll find with the battery that you’ve just bought that it’s streets ahead of what you’ve been using, and it will be the same with a solar controller.
You need to talk to these people or someone similar and buy the correct product for your system.
https://www.altestore.com/store/charge-controllers-c432/
The solar controller I have that seems to be causing problems was very good when I was running two CPU fans and a 5AH SLA. The fans would run and run with brief periods of recharging. Now that it is using a 2.5A fan, it seems to be burning up batteries despite being a 20A controller. That controller is marked CMTD.
The one I just bought that’s simpler (needs no adjustments) is a CM10, rated at 20A. The batteries were all (save for the 10AH) Radio Shack branded, purchased in Radio Shack’s going out of business sale.
Correction, it’s a cmtp02 PWM
Well, running a 35-watt fan off a 10 amp-hour battery – it’s hardly a surprise to me that your batteries are giving up the ghost so quickly! The resistance that needs to be overcome in the magnet will account for most of the charge in the battery and so the fact that you are only getting two minutes life is no surprise to me. And the quick recharge isn’t a quick recharge – it’s the current equalising out when the resistance in the motor stops. And the continual stop-start on the charging circuit is what is probably doing in the solar chargers – try flicking a light switch on and off two hundred times in quick succession and see how long it lasts before the contacts burn out.
I told you before – your equipment just isn’t right for what you are trying to do.
So what if I threw out all the Chinese charge controllers and went with this? https://t.harborfreight.com/30-amp-solar-charge-controller-68738.html
Some of the reviews aren’t too positive, and it’s not going to work your 35-watt fan off the output contacts. (output max rated as 15watts). But then, you shouldn’t be running stuff like that off it anyway. For your accessories you need to have a separate circuit like I have at home.
I’m never bothered by the amperage a charge controller can put through itself to power devices. It’s easy enough just to use the output to power a relay and take the power straight from the battery to the device.