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So I saw the Living Vehicle RV and the $800,000 model was a bit out of my budget so I thought, how could I do it on my own.
You could buy a trailer of your choice.
Then install the following:
Water generator
$3,000
https://us.watergen.com/mobility/watergen-mobile-box/
Which is what the Living vehicle uses or will be using. The mobile box can produce up to 20 liters of water a day so you hook that up and then pump the water into your potable water storage. Only problem is that I can't seem to find distributors in the united states.
You can power it using electricity from your solar system installed on the roof, battery storage and or cybertruck.
Electric Toilet
Around $2000
https://incinolet.com/
It produces waste that can be used as fertilizer. Anybody have experience using these? I figure it would remove the requirement of having to stop at a station to dispose of waste.
Both of these things would require a pretty powerful solar system and/or a large battery bank.
Found an equivalent solar kit which matches the highest tier on the living vehicle.
https://sunwatts.com/4kw-solar-kit-solaria-400-xl-enphase-micro-inverter/
$10,500
Not sure about the capacity because their website on their top model indicates 72 kwh, but without the voltage I don't know what it's true capacity is.
If it's at 12 volts then the below would be a start at 800 ah at $10,000
https://battlebornbatteries.com/product/battle-born-energy-towable-50a-gc3-kit
If you wanted to match it exactly then:
https://battlebornbatteries.com/product/270ah-12v-lifepo4-deep-cycle-gc3-battery/
Buy 19 more of them at $2499 which is a additional $48,036.33 to match the capacity.
So your total cost is your base trailer + $73536.33.
There are plenty of competitors that would end up well below the $800,000.
But with this system you would be able to mostly live without having to connect to electricity, to retrieve water, or to dump waste. You could perpetually live off the grid. Use the solar to charge the cybertuck and use the cybertruck to power the vehicle and you could eliminate the $48036.33. Can somebody who works at Tesla weigh in on the battery capacity of the cybertruck? There is speculation that it'll be at 200 kwh which is more than double of what Living Vehicle is offering. But even if it is half that amount it would be enough.
Anybody know of better ways to accomplish this or to reduce costs? Also please provide any flaws with this strategy if you see any.
You could buy a trailer of your choice.
Then install the following:
Water generator
$3,000
https://us.watergen.com/mobility/watergen-mobile-box/
Which is what the Living vehicle uses or will be using. The mobile box can produce up to 20 liters of water a day so you hook that up and then pump the water into your potable water storage. Only problem is that I can't seem to find distributors in the united states.
You can power it using electricity from your solar system installed on the roof, battery storage and or cybertruck.
Electric Toilet
Around $2000
https://incinolet.com/
It produces waste that can be used as fertilizer. Anybody have experience using these? I figure it would remove the requirement of having to stop at a station to dispose of waste.
Both of these things would require a pretty powerful solar system and/or a large battery bank.
Found an equivalent solar kit which matches the highest tier on the living vehicle.
https://sunwatts.com/4kw-solar-kit-solaria-400-xl-enphase-micro-inverter/
$10,500
Not sure about the capacity because their website on their top model indicates 72 kwh, but without the voltage I don't know what it's true capacity is.
If it's at 12 volts then the below would be a start at 800 ah at $10,000
https://battlebornbatteries.com/product/battle-born-energy-towable-50a-gc3-kit
If you wanted to match it exactly then:
https://battlebornbatteries.com/product/270ah-12v-lifepo4-deep-cycle-gc3-battery/
Buy 19 more of them at $2499 which is a additional $48,036.33 to match the capacity.
So your total cost is your base trailer + $73536.33.
There are plenty of competitors that would end up well below the $800,000.
But with this system you would be able to mostly live without having to connect to electricity, to retrieve water, or to dump waste. You could perpetually live off the grid. Use the solar to charge the cybertuck and use the cybertruck to power the vehicle and you could eliminate the $48036.33. Can somebody who works at Tesla weigh in on the battery capacity of the cybertruck? There is speculation that it'll be at 200 kwh which is more than double of what Living Vehicle is offering. But even if it is half that amount it would be enough.
Anybody know of better ways to accomplish this or to reduce costs? Also please provide any flaws with this strategy if you see any.
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