Sponsored

Cybergirl

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 3, 2020
Threads
40
Messages
873
Reaction score
2,933
Location
Illinois and Arizona
Vehicles
Tesla Model Y LR, Model Y SR, Cybertruck AWD FS
Country flag
With 9.7 kWh of auxiliary battery storage in my Cybertruck including two EcoFlow Delta Pros (3.6 kWh each) and my DIY solar system (2.5 kWh), I'm able to extend off road range by as much as 20 miles. But recharging these batteries once depleted took far too long from one 420W REC Pure Alpha 2 solar panel mounted on the roof top tent. My solution was to add EcoFlow's 400W portable solar panel whenever camping for a couple of nights on the trail. I mount the second panel on the truck over the windshield and frunk lid and point the truck SE:

Tesla Cybertruck How I Achieved a Nominal 820W of Solar (Panels) Generation Cybertruck Solar Panels


This morning at 10am on a clear sunny day I'm generating 600W with the panels at a less than optimal angle to the sun. I'm essentially doubling my energy production. On a sunny day in Arizona in the fall or spring, I estimate it will take a day to recharge the on-board batteries under optimal conditions. This energy can then be transferred to the truck's battery charging at 240V and 30A from the Delta Pros using the mobile connector for an increase of 5 - 7% SoC and another 15 to 20 miles of range depending on driving efficiency.

The removable solar panel folds up to 41" x 24" 40 lb package to fit nicely against the back wall of the vault. It takes just 10 minutes for me to deploy it once the vault is unloaded at the campsite. I place three 1" x 1" lengths of wood under the panels to raise them off the glass and to allow some air ventilation beneath the panels which can get very hot. The portable panel's grommets fit over pegs in the wood standoffs and the whole assembly is secured to the truck with four bungee cords in case the wind picks up. The lower panel flips up and down when the frunk is opened and closed.

A side benefit is the shade that the panels provide to keep the cabin from getting excessively hot.
Sponsored

 

hemiarch

Well-known member
First Name
Ace
Joined
Jan 22, 2025
Threads
116
Messages
8,380
Reaction score
9,633
Location
Arizona
Vehicles
2024 foundation AWD, 2024 model x
Occupation
Trauma Surgeon
Country flag
With 9.7 kWh of auxiliary battery storage in my Cybertruck including two EcoFlow Delta Pros (3.6 kWh each) and my DIY solar system (2.5 kWh), I'm able to extend off road range by as much as 20 miles. But recharging these batteries once depleted took far too long from one 420W REC Pure Alpha 2 solar panel mounted on the roof top tent. My solution was to add EcoFlow's 400W portable solar panel whenever camping for a couple of nights on the trail. I mount the second panel on the truck over the windshield and frunk lid and point the truck SE:

Cybertruck Solar Panels.webp


This morning at 10am on a clear sunny day I'm generating 600W with the panels at a less than optimal angle to the sun. I'm essentially doubling my energy production. On a sunny day in Arizona in the fall or spring, I estimate it will take a day to recharge the on-board batteries under optimal conditions. This energy can then be transferred to the truck's battery charging at 240V and 30A from the Delta Pros using the mobile connector for an increase of 5 - 7% SoC and another 15 to 20 miles of range depending on driving efficiency.

The removable solar panel folds up to 41" x 24" 40 lb package to fit nicely against the back wall of the vault. It takes just 10 minutes for me to deploy it once the vault is unloaded at the campsite. I place three 1" x 1" lengths of wood under the panels to raise them off the glass and to allow some air ventilation beneath the panels which can get very hot. The portable panel's grommets fit over pegs in the wood standoffs and the whole assembly is secured to the truck with four bungee cords in case the wind picks up. The lower panel flips up and down when the frunk is opened and closed.

A side benefit is the shade that the panels provide to keep the cabin from getting excessively hot.
The bungee cords are pretty brilliant.
 


hemiarch

Well-known member
First Name
Ace
Joined
Jan 22, 2025
Threads
116
Messages
8,380
Reaction score
9,633
Location
Arizona
Vehicles
2024 foundation AWD, 2024 model x
Occupation
Trauma Surgeon
Country flag
I have a couple of these as well and it looks like they would fit the same way. 600w a piece
https://a.co/d/3Jt82EJ
I’ll try and set them up that way and snap some pictures.
I also have two of those Ecoflow panels you have and they are excellent. Very durable and believe it or not I’ve seen more than 400w output out of them before.
Your approach also addresses my biggest gripe with them which is how much of a pain in the ass they are to prop up using the case.
 


REM

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 9, 2023
Threads
14
Messages
3,579
Reaction score
6,648
Location
NC
Vehicles
2020 Model 3 Standard Range++ & Diet Cybertruck, Dual Motor
Occupation
Professional Retard
Country flag
I think it would be plausible to design a hinge system so 3 rigid panels could be mounted on the RTT.
 

hemiarch

Well-known member
First Name
Ace
Joined
Jan 22, 2025
Threads
116
Messages
8,380
Reaction score
9,633
Location
Arizona
Vehicles
2024 foundation AWD, 2024 model x
Occupation
Trauma Surgeon
Country flag
I think it would be plausible to design a hinge system so 3 rigid panels could be mounted on the RTT.
Like a fan? Or one forwards and one backwards or what did you have in mind?
 

REM

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 9, 2023
Threads
14
Messages
3,579
Reaction score
6,648
Location
NC
Vehicles
2020 Model 3 Standard Range++ & Diet Cybertruck, Dual Motor
Occupation
Professional Retard
Country flag
Like a fan? Or one forwards and one backwards or what did you have in mind?
3 that fold in together like a pamphlet. It would of course add a lot of weight and thickness. None of which are ideal for something permanently mounted, of course.

I've been thinking about a rack system that easily deploys from the vault, and gets rolled to a cleared space on the ground, so you can be free to move elsewhere.

So, pretty much Basecamp deployable solar.
 

hemiarch

Well-known member
First Name
Ace
Joined
Jan 22, 2025
Threads
116
Messages
8,380
Reaction score
9,633
Location
Arizona
Vehicles
2024 foundation AWD, 2024 model x
Occupation
Trauma Surgeon
Country flag
3 that fold in together like a pamphlet. It would of course add a lot of weight and thickness. None of which are ideal for something permanently mounted, of course.

I've been thinking about a rack system that easily deploys from the vault, and gets rolled to a cleared space on the ground, so you can be free to move elsewhere.

So, pretty much Basecamp deployable solar.
Without the bedrack you could make one giant flat panel or the equivalent using multiple smaller ones from the lightbar to the tailgate and maybe hinge it at the lightbar or aeroflap and put it on struts so you could lift it to get in the tonneau.
May even be able to use that to approximate something like the trailer aero experiment that was recently posted here based on the Tesla patent.
https://www.cybertruckownersclub.co...test-with-and-without-a-wind-deflector.49357/
 
  • Like
Reactions: REM

Beetlebug62

Well-known member
First Name
Ken
Joined
Mar 24, 2025
Threads
6
Messages
457
Reaction score
802
Location
Maine, USA
Vehicles
2018 Tesla Model 3 LR-AWD, 2025 CyberTruck dual-motor
Occupation
retired
Country flag
Installed my little 200w, nominal, system, yesterday. Charges my 1kWh Bluetti in the frunk. When my cap comes, I'll think about adding panels to the top.
Tesla Cybertruck How I Achieved a Nominal 820W of Solar (Panels) Generation IMG_0695
Sponsored

 
 








Top