Solar Powered Frog Sensor #52
Replies: 10 comments 1 reply
-
There has been some discussion on other compute options in this issue: #31 |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
Could we talk to some of the folks at Purple Air to see how they do things? |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
I don't believe that Purple Air offers a solar powered sensor. However, I've been told they use an ESP32. |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
The first step is to get the power consumption down as low as possible, that makes everything easier. Sensor updates every 30 seconds, read only OS, shutting down when not on etc. Once the power consumption is low, power from a solar panel (Changing LiPo or LiFE battery) is easier. I'm sure that there's plenty of info on the web about doing this. |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
As @djgood mentioned in #31, there is a product called the "PiJuice" that solves some of the problems. It's a small battery pack that attaches to a PI and offers a real-time clock to perform wake and sleep functions. I actually purchased a PiJuice a long time ago and was pretty unhappy with it. However, it might still be a good starting point. Here were my notes from that time:
|
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
@keenanjohnson I believe you already took some power measurements, but I had this little voltage reducer set up for something at work so I took it home and plugged it into the frog sensor for an evening. |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
Thanks @eaudiffred ! |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
In #4 we measured the power consumption to be about 2.6 watts. |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
It's my suspicion that we'll need to move to a lower power processor in order to make the power budget close for a reasonably sized solar powered sensor, but open to other opinions / more analysis :) |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
@daveb377 Unfortunately I did not log any data. I'm not sure how/if possible with that hardware. While it was plugged in the voltage did not move from 5.28V. The amps fluctuated between 0.43-0.49A. That lines up pretty closely with @keenanjohnson measurement of 2.6watts. If you come up with something that may work, I'd be interested in duplicating your test set up! I was looking into batteries and solar panels from Goal Zero mainly because they are just plug-and-play (expensive though). Like @keenanjohnson mentioned above, the power budget is kinda large right now and made it difficult to find something that seemed reasonable from a size and cost stand point. Going into winter makes it harder too because the day light is disappearing fast! |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
I think it would be great from a sustainability point of view, to have a solar-powered version of the Frog Sensor!
I did some early prototyping around this concept, but I wasn't able to easily assemble a power subsystem that was reasonable to keep a Raspberry Pi operating via solar power alone.
Primary Technical Challenge
The main challenge is that the power draw of a Raspberry Pi (or really any Linux-based system it seems) is too high to reasonably create a small, always-on solar-powered device. I've thought of two main ways to address this:
Secondary Challenges / Other Considerations
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
All reactions