Nothing I saw was 240.
honestly, I think you are over estimating usage. Two units is a huge thing to fit in a Skoolie( I used to design and build skoolies) and I never had more than 5k. I did add a soft start to the AC on the main cabin and left the bedroom ac on shore or gen power only. That drastically reduced start up loads. Everything else can be managed in the sense of just understanding what you are using and not running a portable heater and electric skillet and ac and hair dryer all at once.
Possibly more money but midnite makes a nice midnite/magnum combo on an e-panel that is mostly pre wired. Quality stuff, buy it once and it will serve you well. i have shipped those out with lithium’s or gel agm batteries and 6 big panels on the roof and people have lived fully off grid from there forward Without sacrifices. A gen is a nice back up in A 3 day white out snow storm you meant to avoid… a Honda 2200 or 3000 is usually enough.
propane is nice, use it for cooking, hot water when you don’t have the spare juice to heat the tank, and an emergency furnace for when It is super cold and there isnot much power.
you are calculating using everything all at once and that isn’t really realistic. also, beware as others have said the parasitic draw of units.
also, keep the panels close to the roof ( not flat top, angle them to match the roof line) or you will get mad windage issues while driving in a crosswind. Wyoming and Nevada, I’m looking at you…
honestly, I think you are over estimating usage. Two units is a huge thing to fit in a Skoolie( I used to design and build skoolies) and I never had more than 5k. I did add a soft start to the AC on the main cabin and left the bedroom ac on shore or gen power only. That drastically reduced start up loads. Everything else can be managed in the sense of just understanding what you are using and not running a portable heater and electric skillet and ac and hair dryer all at once.
Possibly more money but midnite makes a nice midnite/magnum combo on an e-panel that is mostly pre wired. Quality stuff, buy it once and it will serve you well. i have shipped those out with lithium’s or gel agm batteries and 6 big panels on the roof and people have lived fully off grid from there forward Without sacrifices. A gen is a nice back up in A 3 day white out snow storm you meant to avoid… a Honda 2200 or 3000 is usually enough.
propane is nice, use it for cooking, hot water when you don’t have the spare juice to heat the tank, and an emergency furnace for when It is super cold and there isnot much power.
you are calculating using everything all at once and that isn’t really realistic. also, beware as others have said the parasitic draw of units.
also, keep the panels close to the roof ( not flat top, angle them to match the roof line) or you will get mad windage issues while driving in a crosswind. Wyoming and Nevada, I’m looking at you…