As you know, water heater elements are purely resistive. That means that the only thing input voltage changes is the amount of power it can consume. At the $25 price point you are likely getting either 120vac or 240vac water heater elements that have been repackaged for lower DC voltages. If you can find a 5500 watt (common size) 120vac element, locally or online, it will put out roughly 600 watts from a 12.8v DC source. And it will likely be about half the price, as you save the middle man markup.
@mpkleinbreteler4 жыл бұрын
@@calysagora3615 search for Ohm's law calculator (fill in the voltage and resistance) :)
@nickmeyer2084 жыл бұрын
@@calysagora3615 Look up Ohms law. V=I*R (Voltage=Current*Resistance). In your case I=V/R.
@nocare4 жыл бұрын
@Jan Lenz Power is linear to voltage when current is kept constant. So you are correct under purely resistive loads that power will quadruple for a doubling in voltage. If your using a constant current system the power can be calculated in a linear fashion. It helps to outline ones assumptions and correct those rather than simply stating someone is wrong. I.E show them under what conditions they are wrong because under diffrent conditions with proper assumptions they may be correct.
@ScottyDMcom4 жыл бұрын
@@nocare, there are no assumptions. Aspendell clearly stated the heating element is purely resistive. Therefore power is E^2 / R. Cut the voltage by 1/10th and power is cut by 1/100th. Now Jan assumed 12.8, not 12.0 volts, so they came out with 62.77 watts.
@sugar4o4 жыл бұрын
In order to have both elements in series, thus having max resistance, you should remove one of the plates i think, and hook the power to the ones that are not connected
@paulnorberg38694 жыл бұрын
I like your attitude. Giving vendors a chance to make things right it’s always a good way to go in business.
@iareid82554 жыл бұрын
David, a cold resistance measurement will give x. However the only way to know the resistance at operating temperature is a voltage and current measurement and calculate. All resistive conductor's resistance varies with temperature, most are positive and as temperature increases so does the resistance. At switch on there will be a surge current which drops off as the element heats up. One other point to remember is that multimeters are rubbish at measuring low resistance.
@dalenassar91522 жыл бұрын
...just wanted to let you know that my new 600W 12V heating element came in today. The resistance tested right (2.4 Ohms, although I know some resistive loads can change dramatically with temperature...this doesn't seem to), and when I connected it to my 12v 62A power source, I FINALLY GOT 50 a @ 600W. I got it through Amazon and it was a 'twin' for the fake. Thanks for the video!!!
@dalenassar91522 жыл бұрын
I wrote 2.4, when I intended to write 0.24 Ohms....
@donstetson85354 жыл бұрын
An Unintended Consequence - While watching this video I saw you measure a DC current with the meter clamp and wondered how that was possible. My experiences with clamp around ammeters years ago were limited to AC circuits where the varying flux induced a voltage in the clamp coil. So I used Google Search and, thanks to Fluke, learned about Hall Effect sensors for steady state flux measurement. Seventy-five years old and still learning stuff all the time.
@johnbirkland62544 жыл бұрын
You should use Kelvin contacts (4-wire) when measuring low resistance.
@Onlyindianpj Жыл бұрын
What about the current drawn
@theupsideofdownsizing4 жыл бұрын
I appreciate your attitude towards the situation. Refreshing. Hopefully the next set work as advertised.
@james107394 жыл бұрын
Kinda but letting people get away with selling us junk and unless you know what you are doing and call them out you would just have a very poor performing water heater
@teekay17854 жыл бұрын
Like that you are giving them another chance. Hope its as advertised this time
@reedcalder96844 жыл бұрын
I just got me some 12v 600w im going to test them like you are
@isettech4 жыл бұрын
When measuring low resistances, it is common for the meter leads to have higher resistance than the resistor. Low resistance is often measured with a "4 lead ohm meter" setup. Use a constant current lab supply and feed your load with 100mA or 1A depending on the load. Measure the voltage across the resistor and calculate the resistor value. EG, your element at 1 amp is close to 1 volt, so it would be 1 ohm, or if fed 100mA, would be 0.1 Volts = 1 ohm. With this method the real 800Watt element at 1 amp would have 0.18 Volts on the terminals and dissipate 0.18 watts, so the test would not heat your element for the test.
@mactrucin4 жыл бұрын
DUH! test leads are 4th order in resistance, therefore, nobrainer. GEEZ.. over-complicate a simple thing.
@TheUnofficialMaker2 жыл бұрын
not necessary he measured the actual amp draw. P=IE, simple as pie.
@jonleiend13814 жыл бұрын
Hook up the elements in series then take a resistance reading. Meters like that do not do well near 1 ohms. If each element is 1 ohm in parallel they will be 0.5 ohms. in series 2 ohms. Your meter will give a much more accurate reading at 2 ohms.
@Richardincancale4 жыл бұрын
That’s true - better to do what David did after - measure the current and voltage.
@D2O24 жыл бұрын
I agree that these meters are not great at low resistance, but I don't believe he is getting bad readings as his power meter was showing 1.1 Ohms and ohms law calculations based on voltage and current from the power meter also point to about 1.1 ohms. No point in doing more work to get the same answer as it has already been verified 2 times.
@james107394 жыл бұрын
Ya like D said I have noticed never getting real low readings and that would probably give you a little more accurate number but he tested it and it's right there in line with his measurements
@LithiumSolar4 жыл бұрын
Wow, that is very poor of them to have sold a product they "just got in" and didn't do any testing on. I like your attitude towards giving them another chance, but I feel that wasn't a mistake... We shall see, keep us posted on how the new element works!
@boots78594 жыл бұрын
I dislike his attitude of saying 'hey you bent me over once, how about another go?" Name and shame for the benefit of all, and find someone more reputeable to indirectly advertise.
@volvo094 жыл бұрын
True, but sometimes the buyers aren't technical, they just buy relevant stuff people are looking for from wholesalers or discontinued bulk lots and have it for sale.. A 2nd chance if they don't seem scammy is fine for me... I'd do it. If they fought back when given scientific evidence and didn't even bother with a different unit then they are shady.
@korishan4 жыл бұрын
It's also possible someone jumped the gun and posted them on ebay before they were supposed to. David did say they were on the ebay store and not the website store. This could have been an honest mistake.
@jonleiend13814 жыл бұрын
The seller should have let you keep them and then just send you new tested good ones.
@KyBrancaccio4 жыл бұрын
?@@volvo09 Some thing called "incoming inspection" NO CHECKING? The cost of not checking is WAY lower than shipping a bunch of wrong goods.
@tanja89074 жыл бұрын
We need more guys like you in society Dave. You and your family are awesome. Love the videos!
@theprepperfrog1674 жыл бұрын
Thank you, sir.
@kansasadventure1831 Жыл бұрын
I appriciate how you handled that.
@CoolMusicToMyEars4 жыл бұрын
When measure low ohms 4 wire is best, or use current - voltage drop access the elements
@james107394 жыл бұрын
You are not measuring from like a display on a power supply it's just the multimeter that makes no sense really I mean a meter is not going to have any way to hook up 4 wires to a multimeter
@isettech4 жыл бұрын
@@james10739 In a 4 wire ohm meter setup, you don't need a 4 wire meter. You need a regulated current source and voltmeter. This test would use a bench supply set to provide 1 amp. The 800Watt element should have 0.18 ohms of resistance. At one amp, the terminals on the element should have 0.18 Volts, easily measured with a DMM to 3 significant digits. EG 180mV. His element is about 1 ohm, so 1 amp would provide a measured voltage of 1 volt, or with a 3.5 digit DMM, 1.000 volts at 1 amp. www.circuitsdiy.com/low-resistance-measurement-method/ I have to regularly repair equipment and verify the value of 0.01 ohm resistors used in current metering.
@BlackheartCharlie2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video! I'm in the process of setting up a 12v load diverter on my sailboat to heat water for showers and washing. Now I know that I might not get what I order and to double-check the resistance of the element before going to all the trouble of installing it. I=E/R "More than a good idea, it's the law" Best regards from Key West, Capt. Blackheart Charlie
@Olayinkahakeemishola Жыл бұрын
Thanks for this wonderful insight. Please I have a steam boiler of 24 liters and 3 phase, producing 6 bar pressure. Please what if I changed this connection to single phase, will I I still get 6 bar pressure? Thanks.
@jeffberwick4 жыл бұрын
When you measure such a low resistance with a DMM, you need to zero out the resistance of the leads. The leads have more resistance than the element itself. A better bench type meter will allow you to make 4 wire measurements using 2 force leads (forcing current) and 2 sense leads (measuring voltage). However, your water bucket power test did seem to indicate that the element was weaker than expected and the wire gauge was pretty huge, so the poor result cannot be blamed on wire loss in that test. You were right to return them anyway.
@NoelBarlau4 жыл бұрын
They usually have the specs printed on them. I ordered a bunch off AliExpress straight from China for the DMPPT450 setup, and if you can wait a month for them to arrive, I can recommend going that route as they're significantly cheaper and were exactly what I ordered.
@DavidPozEnergy4 жыл бұрын
Thank you Noel. Was there a supplier name you went through? Or a link to help the viewers?
@NoelBarlau4 жыл бұрын
@@DavidPozEnergy You bet. Here's the link to the ones I used for the DMPPT450 project. There are other wattages and voltages listed by the same seller. Also if you do some math you can create combinations of them using series or parallel strings to achieve the desired voltage and amperage. www.aliexpress.com/item/32549842825.html?spm=a2g0s.12269583.0.0.26ed528bfvxLub It's DERNORD Official Store #1862595
@DavidPozEnergy4 жыл бұрын
Thanks for trying Noel. That link is specific to your past orders. I can't get it to work for me. Maybe, what's the sellers name? I can find it and post a link.
@NoelBarlau4 жыл бұрын
@@DavidPozEnergy Thanks for letting me know. I tried a different link and updated my last post. Let me know if it still doesn't work.
@DavidPozEnergy4 жыл бұрын
Works great. Thanks for sharing
@petercamusojr15454 жыл бұрын
Max power point is when the resistance of the source equal the resistance of the load. Most heating elements increase resistance as they heat up. Old fashioned lightbulbs made of tungsten changes resistance dramatically. I don't know the temperature characteristics of these type of elements. I suspect they are made of tungsten and the resistance will increase as they get hot.
@Dutch_off_grid_homesteading4 жыл бұрын
heya totaly agree and that's why it's good to do your own test's and calcalations
@Jhale7164 жыл бұрын
The battery controller meter concured with the multimeter. Right there is the confirmation before going anywhere else. 1.1ohm suggests that the element is a higher voltage rating, which equals incorrect product sent.
@careyjohnson17844 жыл бұрын
Think you for the video
@RyanHannaProductions4 жыл бұрын
I'm pretty sure they sale the elements as maximum wattage. So if you apply 24v or 48v, you'll see more wattage
@Jpiva24 жыл бұрын
Great attitude, give them a second chance!! Nice! Congrats!
@damackay754 жыл бұрын
I agree with the other poster. These sound like 1500 watt elements because 10 * 12 volts is 120 volts, and 10 times 150 watts is 1500 watts.
@darrenschmitz27124 жыл бұрын
i was looking at buying a 12vdc element recently and came across a website that explained possibly what is going on. Apparently is all too common practice for resellers to buy standard AC water heating elements and sell them as more expensive DC elements. Apparently all heating elements are marked for their voltage and output, dishonest sellers will melt these markings to make them illegible. Check your elements and look for the markings or the melt plastic which was used to cover their tracks.
@raisagorbachov4 жыл бұрын
Low wattage elements will be slow but very useful in a solar-powered RV like mine.
@ChristianTinyLiving17 күн бұрын
Whoa. Very valuable information amen.
@baboela3784 жыл бұрын
Thank you,I had the same problem!
@voneschenbachmusic4 жыл бұрын
Testing to validate specs is always good - especially when dealing with Chinese stuff. Thanks for sharing your testing methodology - looking forward to your next project.
@UPD2824 жыл бұрын
I ordered a 12V/300 watt element from them. I plan on putting it into a 18 gallon barrel inside a 30 gal barrel surrounded by closed foam insulation!!
@glennp22884 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video Its looking forward to seeing the results and if the next ones are up to spec.
@IllumTheMessage4 жыл бұрын
Looking forward to the 600w video.
@garymucher95904 жыл бұрын
I see you actually verify what you purchase, and that IS a good thing. So many would have never ever done that. And that is because the typical consumer just doesn't understand such things... Thumbs Up! Math doesn't lie!
@whatthefunction91404 жыл бұрын
*Chinese watts are only 20 percent US watts*
@widewinger14544 жыл бұрын
And only last 20% as long.
@korishan4 жыл бұрын
Watts you sayin!?!?!
@nickab97194 жыл бұрын
@@widewinger1454 nah, those are made to spec for USA importers.
@michaelsimpson97794 жыл бұрын
Like amazing claims on stereo speakers/amps.......multiply x the date next tuesday and whack that on the packaging.....
@onegreenev4 жыл бұрын
@@nickab9719 On paper maybe.
@stevekight1955 Жыл бұрын
I'm sure you checked the jumper plates on the fitting for correct connection.
@FrugalRepair4 жыл бұрын
Great use of tools to verify the specs! And great attitude about it. What is the ammeter box that you were using?
@DavidPozEnergy4 жыл бұрын
The meter box I built in a previous video. kzbin.info/www/bejne/qXuQpKxuhNikqJI
@FrugalRepair4 жыл бұрын
@@DavidPozEnergy Thanks! Sorry I missed that one.
@offgridinthepacificnorthwe32104 жыл бұрын
Check your math at 48 volts. I think they sent you the wrong ones.
@sharon69969er4 жыл бұрын
This. 100% there's been a screw up in the supply chain somewhere (whether it was by who he bought them off, or who they bought it off in china) and he's got a 48v element. Doesn't help they normally don't mark anything at any point either.
@richardowens90614 жыл бұрын
I think they provided 120v 1500 watt elements instead.
@james107394 жыл бұрын
Ya but at 1.1 ohms that's like 2000 watts it's closer at 24v it's over 500w
@james107394 жыл бұрын
@@richardowens9061 at 120v it would be like 13,000 watts
@sciglassblower4 жыл бұрын
It is advertised as 12v 800w
@trucker0werner4 жыл бұрын
You have a heater whit 2 heaters in it. the copper plate in between wil put it in serie or parralel. I think it is on serie, so both heater wil get each 6V that means both heater are 0.5ohm each, if you change it to parralel than both heaters wil get 12V and the resistance is changed to 0.25ohm in theorie. Than the power draw changes to 800watt. The second question is than wil the unit be able to resive and hold the 67Amps or wil it melt because of the high current
@TheEcono4 жыл бұрын
I like Dave's attitude here giving small businesses a quote un quote " A Fair Shake ". 👍👍👏👏💯
@chrisfryer31184 жыл бұрын
I'd be into a low wattage 24v dc thermostatic controlled one, like the 240v ac 3kw item found in my house. It'd make a useful dump load.
@TrackGeeks4 жыл бұрын
How low do you want to go? If you take the 3kw elements and connect them to 24v they will be about 300w.
@volodumurkalunyak46514 жыл бұрын
@@TrackGeeks resistive load (heater) rated at 240V 3000W will take 30W at 24V, not 300W (P=U^2/R)
@jonleiend13814 жыл бұрын
I hooked up 2 full sized solar panels in series. Then wired them directly to the bottom heating element in my home hot water tank. I used the rated voltage and current of the panels to figure the panels resistance. Then found an element that was close to the same resistance. Heating elements do not care if the power is DC or AC or the voltage as long as the voltage is not too high. The top element made sure that the water was up to temp. Did not have any switches or controllers. Wen the sun was shining it heated the water. Wen the sun went down it did not heat the water. I used some big 50A plugs to connect the element to the panel wires. It worked really well in the summer. not as well in the winter.
@stephseckold4324Ай бұрын
That's what I'm planning on doung. What sort of heating element? When you say full-size panels, what wattage are they?
@photonphil8732 ай бұрын
Good stuff! Thank You!!!!!!
@markfiddament93834 жыл бұрын
You got a 24v 600w heater... at 12v it is only 150w... if you double the voltage the current doubles so you get 4 times the watts...
@50srefugee4 жыл бұрын
I am vaguely remembering something I encountered decades ago and haven't used since, fair warning. One of the tricks with transferring power is impedance matching. The resistance of the current source must equal the resistance of the load. Since you can't put an ohmmeter across a battery or solar panel, you look at its short circuit amps, and derive the resistance from that and the voltage. In essence, this is the same trick you use in a mechanical power train by shifting gears. Something to think about; I'm up late and can't be arsed to suss out the details.
@marcovoetberg66183 жыл бұрын
Well that is a very different thing you are talking about now. Impedance matching is used when dealing with RF signals to reduce signal reflection from the load. In this case we are talking DC and the load is all resistance (no immaginary part) so signal reflection is not an issue. You don't want any resistance in the source ideally. If your source has the same resistance as your load half of the heat will produced by your source and the other half by the heater.
@Zorlig4 жыл бұрын
So about 30 volts to get closer to the watts on that one. Seems like a lot of amps to try and eat power at 12v though.
@l0I0I0I02 жыл бұрын
Was wondering if the resistance decreases when heated as some materials change resistant with temperature? Just covering the bases. I came across the same similar issue here recently.
@DavidPozEnergy2 жыл бұрын
Generally speaking (and true of the water heaters I have tested) the resistance goes up a little as they heat.
@l0I0I0I02 жыл бұрын
@@DavidPozEnergy TY
@timhofstetter56544 жыл бұрын
Ahem. They are also as often listed in terms of current draw and N volts. You aren't really very interested in watts, you're interested in amps of current. It's even straightforward to translate volts / ohms / amps because they directly correlate to each other.
@davewright30884 жыл бұрын
One thing to consider that has not yet been mentioned here is that power ratings for electric components are often a maximum. Meaning that exceeding that rating will likely damage or shorten the life of the component. The actual power dissipated (heat) will depend entirely on the voltage applied and the resistance of the element, which will change a bit (increase) as it heats up... Yes, the vendor likely sent Dave the wrong element, and the resistance should be specified by the seller.
@paradiselost9946 Жыл бұрын
would be best on 36V... old grid tied panels. 1R. 12v. 12A. 12x12=144 X1=144. yep. 150 watts. 36v/1R 36A. 1296W... theyre immersed. theyll take a bit more. plenty more... or you just ignore all of that and buy nichrome wire by the roll. what will glow red or melt in the air will stay cold in water. it doesnt need to be insulated, its still more conductive than the water.
@NightshiftCustom4 жыл бұрын
would work pretty good for a 24 volt setup at 500ish watts
@MexicanMovie2 жыл бұрын
great video, thanks !
@flyguille4 жыл бұрын
Resistence varies with heat, if that is measured in cool 1.1ohm, in hot it will get higher resistence.
@GroovyVideo22 ай бұрын
purchased a 400w -120v air heater from walmart - actually draws 245 watts - I use to burn up extra solar so its a ok size
@KevIsOffGrid4 жыл бұрын
Ive similar ones, they can be 24v 600w with 2 elements in series with or 2 x 300w in parallel - depending how the brass fitting on the end are configured - so watch out for that as mine came with the brass connections for parallel / 24v
@Psi-Storm4 жыл бұрын
These are wired in parallel, you would have to remove one of the plates to wire it in series. If the resistance on both strings are kinda similar, the resistance in series would quadruple and the power output would drop to P=U²/R= 32,7W
@pfoxhound4 жыл бұрын
When I was working for ebay seller. He was writing Tested, assuring you that it it as advertised. But no one ever touched the item for testing because time is money. Not every buyer will notice, chance that flaw will not be discovered is high. When you read tested - mostly not tested.
@boots78594 жыл бұрын
One of the only ways to really protect yourself when buying general Chinease made products outside retail channels, is to find a forum or similar place where people have already bought and tested whatever widget you want. There you can find the actual specs, and sellers that seem to have at least some reliability. And even then, oftentimes those known good sellers will switch to a model they can get a few pennies cheaper from someone else, and restock with that model for a short-term profit bump. Then of course, people find out that newer model is not as good as previous, and seller see's his demand tank. Chinese especially can't seem to control themselves from killing the golden goose, this happens continuously...
@Michael-z2y Жыл бұрын
Just wondering what youre using to keep the heating ellement away from the bucket melting
@PipeManPeep4 жыл бұрын
Your multimeter probably has a resolution of 0.1 ohm. As such, it's not best suited to sub-1 ohm measurements. When measuring low resistances, first 'calibrate' your measurements. Touch the probes together and note the reading. Subtract that number from all your measurements. Still... clearly the elements were not what you wanted.
@ricardobernardo26034 жыл бұрын
Nice
@kenw58904 жыл бұрын
For a high wattage device, you should use a voltage as high as practical, this will reduce your current and hence wire size required
@wellwisher5413 жыл бұрын
Not true at all for most devices especially resistive loads. The higher the voltage for pure resistive loads, the greater the current they draw. Even wattage increases. A 800w device would start drawing upwards of 850w on higher voltages. Its all about the resistivity. The higher the voltage, the less the resistance, and the more the current can pass through.
@anjhindul4 жыл бұрын
Before you said "we have been running for 10 minutes" I was gonna say "just wait until you let it sit for a bit... as a resistive load gets hotter the resistance increases so your power will decrease" lolol
@josephsvensson66374 жыл бұрын
This is only true with some resistive loads, some others will have a negative temperature coefficent (NTC) and as they get hotter their resistance will decrease, which often leads to a thermal runaway. You can test it with a small carbon rod which has a NTC and when connected to a power supply or battery will start conducting slowly but eventually conduct more and more until it burns up. It is a fun experiment as right before it burns up all the way it will start glowing bright white, easily enough to light up a room
@CosmicSeeker694 жыл бұрын
@@josephsvensson6637 now THAT sounds like a YT video idea to me!
@SteelyEyedH4 жыл бұрын
I have one of these to heat up an outside shower in my camper, it was advertised as 150w. I actually cheat a bit and run 24v through (cheap enough that if I burn it out, ill know not to) but have probably had it running all told for about 15 hours, and yes, this isnt to make a hot shower, just luke warm :)
@Psi-Storm4 жыл бұрын
Maybe your heat loss is too high to get it warmer with only a 300W load.
@flanagancollin4 жыл бұрын
I want hopefully we can get an update on the 600 watt heaters to see if they are as advertised
@sams58034 жыл бұрын
Love your content so darn much man you rock honestly
@4sIElectronics4 жыл бұрын
I'm noticing that it's getting more and more common to sell items bit off the listing. I assume that they will get a ton of money on customers not technical enough to notice it. But now 3 times I have encountered this, thay all seem to go the same route and try to buy you to be silent.
@CoolMusicToMyEars4 жыл бұрын
Hi David, in this country 🇬🇧 we call it not fit for purpose 😔 If its 12V elements 800W look for mobile home - camping gear that has internal elements of suitable power, then obtain parts list and order that part, 👍 To be honest elements should be stamped 1kw 2kw 3kw 800w etc Look at manufacturers that make only elements & if possible buy from them 👍 Or obtain their suppliers, Don't go for general suppliers that just buy in from China & double up the price, Buy from China or HK or Japan directly Philip D 🇬🇧
@plinble2 ай бұрын
Wire all 4 of the heater elements in parallel? Much closer to the 800W, with a safety margin.
@HenryOCarmichaelSmith3 жыл бұрын
were these sold as 800w electrical draw or 800w of heat output
@patrickconrad3962 жыл бұрын
Hi anyone know if it would be safe to wrap stainless steel pipe around an element? Trying to get a little bit more heat in my circulating shower
@ciaranbrennan84964 жыл бұрын
Great video!
@agt1554 жыл бұрын
The terminals look like they can be swapped between serial and parallel. Perhaps try it in the other configuration.
@DavidPozEnergy4 жыл бұрын
You are right. I showed it in parallels, which is how it's supposed to be for the 800w rating. But I've gotten this question enough that I'll demonstrate the series connection in my follow up video. It will draw less watts in series.
@izzzzzz64 жыл бұрын
You could just get more of those and put them in parallel. At least if you have more of them the chances of them heating up will be less and as a result of the banks higher power handling they will have a steadier resistance.
@joselr1463 жыл бұрын
I enjoy your videos. I would like to see if you can run your heating element in a bucket to run your garage under floor heating.
@jasonudall86144 жыл бұрын
I suspect you have a 110-120 V element there.
@mcg67624 жыл бұрын
Probably more like 24V. If you double the voltage the power quadruples (for resistive loads).
@nealthomson95054 жыл бұрын
How about measuring at temp
@richardowens90614 жыл бұрын
I think they provided 120v 1500 watt elements instead.
@GRAHAMAUS4 жыл бұрын
Might be getting ahead of your upcoming projects, but for best efficiency from solar or wind, heating water with a resistor is easily beaten by using a heat pump. A 1kW compressor can easily move 3kW of effective heat into the water because it's only moving it, not creating it. Might be something you could go into at some point.
@DavidPozEnergy4 жыл бұрын
That statement is true sometimes. This past week my outside air temperature hasn't gone into double digits (F). :)
@yankey44 жыл бұрын
I was thinking them would be more like 48 volts. Thanks for sharing. God Bless.
@mendebil2 жыл бұрын
70Amps from a car battery long enough to heat a bucket of water sounds plausible to you? Will the battery survive?
@BB-sm8ey2 жыл бұрын
The resistance of the heating element will change dramatically as it warms up.
@ScottyDMcom4 жыл бұрын
David, while you are probably correct, but there are two things you didn't do that could account for the error. Or at least these are two things you didn't _show,_ and some of your viewers will assume they are irrelevant. #1) To get accurate low ohms measurements you need a four-wire meter and probe set, which I didn't see in the video. The circuitry inside the meter + the meter leads has some resistance. You can measure it then subtract it from the meter reading, but ordinary multimeters typically don't measure very low. My meter, like yours, only resolves to 1/10th ohm on the lowest scale. My meters "zero" reading (touching the probe tips together) is 0.8. If I'd seen a reading of 1.1 I'd assume the heater element was 0.3 ohms, which is pretty close to 0.18 given that we'd be lucky to be within +/-1 digit. Perhaps you're meter has a zero function, but if it does I didn't see you use it. #2) While you measured the current in the wire to the heater, you didn't measure the voltage at the heater leads. I'd be surprised if this was much of an issue, because for it to be a problem your system meter (the gray box) would have to have a crazy-high voltage drop--like on the order of 7-ish volts. I assume when you built the system meter you tested it thoroughly. But quick question: is the voltage shown in the upper-left of the panel output voltage or battery voltage? I don't often watch your videos, but when I do I'm impressed with your knowledge and approach to problem solving. I don't know if you've any formal training, but you are not a hack. You know what you're doing. And sometimes you videos make me think, which is always a positive. Keep up the good work.
@DavidPozEnergy4 жыл бұрын
Hi ScottyDM, Thank you for your thoughtful comment. You are correct that I didn't show everything. My green multimeter has about 0.2 ohms in the leads. I own a 4-wire meter and checked the water heater off-camera. Sometimes when I show "specialty" tools the audience can't relate. I try to show things using more "common" tools whenever possible. Since the multimeter is not the perfect tool for this type of measurement I also hooked it up and showed it not pulling the amps. The grey box meter is something I threw together in a previous video to allow the audience to see what is happening. The voltage reading of the watt meter is the battery voltage. Yes, there will be a slight drop on the water heater, but not much. It's 4 gauge wire, 36" long. These are good points you made. I have received my replacement 600w elements, and my refund for the mis-labeled ones. I'll do a follow up video and include checking the voltage at the element. I'm always open to further suggestions to improve my content. I learn from the audience at least as much as I teach, so I'm grateful for the feedback.
@skumdus32804 жыл бұрын
OOOOHH YEAEE EVERYTHING IS SO BEAUTIFUL
@MyIronman82 жыл бұрын
You were right because I’m at Mater it says 01.1 I think I trust your meter and that other meter more than I would eBay.
@KumaresanPalanivel-uc3mt9 ай бұрын
I need some doubt please told for me
@tommycoates29813 жыл бұрын
What problems would I have connecting 600 watts of solar directly to a 600w 12v heating element in heat storage tank besides the possibility of overheating? Skip controllers, relays, or thermostats.
@KobkG4 жыл бұрын
Are you sure these were not setup for 24v? Can you test each coil without the bars?
@uhjyuff20954 жыл бұрын
I like these DC elements with dual element, because I can play around with the resistances to get different power levels.
@antoniobragancamartins31654 жыл бұрын
Good about the video! But, why someone has a wall panel tools that has so much hammers, instead diversified tools? Hehehe! You won a follower guy!
@DavidPozEnergy4 жыл бұрын
I used to be known on the jobsite as "the guy with spares". I was always happy to lend out tools, even though that didn't happen often. Hammers, tape measures, pencils, and saws I always had a plenty.
@largepimping4 жыл бұрын
If you're trying to measure lower resistances, you'll want to be sure and zero out your meter first (if it has that feature!). Not saying that was the problem here - the 1.1 Ohms is WAY the heck wrong, so the point of your video is totally valid. But this will be a bit more of an issue, for instance, when you get heating elements with smaller resistances like you expect to be receiving.
@DavidPozEnergy4 жыл бұрын
Thank you for getting the point. I agree with you (and other comments) about the meter. I own a more accurate meter specific for resistance, but since it was so far different, I wanted to show checking ohms with a more common multi-meter. Part of making the videos is trying to think about when to use normal tools vs. the specialty tools I've been picking up over the past couple years.
@user-vq4mt4zd4e2 жыл бұрын
great content thanks
@GreenTechFusionRenewableEnergy4 жыл бұрын
That is prob a 24v version David not a 12v element to get 800 watts out of it. Maybe mislabeled or not labeled at all.
@danielhess280611 ай бұрын
You stated that the total resistance was 12.5 ohms but that was with both elements in series. Was it not possible to wire them in parallel which would result in 0.275 ohms, a bit closer to your desired goal of 0.18 ohms?
@DavidPozEnergy11 ай бұрын
I checked it in both series and parallel. I thought the video clip I shared was in parallel.
@knowledgeshortvideos2 жыл бұрын
Can you use the same pv panels for the dc element and the inverter?
@DIYwithBatteries4 жыл бұрын
Always with cool stuff 👍
@colinmilton2521 Жыл бұрын
Hello David on water heater element which is the positive or negative terminal s please has I'm trying to make hot water
@DavidPozEnergy Жыл бұрын
Water heater elements don't have a positive or negative side. They are simple resistors. I can hook my positive or negative to either side.
@FrancisdeBriey4 жыл бұрын
I love your videos
@knowledgeshortvideos2 жыл бұрын
An idea : what if you pass the water pipe, going to the tank or going out of the water tank, through a dc induction heater that works on solar panels? Will that give instant hot showering water maybe!?
@knowledgeshortvideos2 жыл бұрын
Hi. I tried to connect dc 48v 1500w water heater element, and 3 panels 450w×44~50v in parallel... between them 32amps circuit dc circuit breaker ... distance between panels and element around 30m .. cable size 2×6mm ... volts received around 44v ... after putting switch on : voltage drops to 1 to 3 volts ... what's the problem? Thanks
@charalamposiwakeimidis47218 ай бұрын
u have to calculate the ohms,,,,is not working like that,,,try them in series connection and change the resistance to 240v x 3500watt and u will make it if no other problems appears
@ColinWatters4 жыл бұрын
Is it likely to be a pure resistive load? Don't they have coils inside?