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Solar for Weather Stations & Environmental Monitoring

Measure what matters—rain, wind, PM2.5, soil, river levels—without trenching AC or swapping batteries every season.
LinkSolar builds compact, field-serviceable solar for masts, enclosures, and low-draw sensor stacks so your station logs through storms and short winter days.

Who This Is For

  • Ridge-top masts, riverbanks, farms, and construction sites where AC runs are impractical.
  • Installations facing canopy shade, frost/icing, or fast weather swings.
  • Sensor stacks that must run unattended (data logger + radio) with predictable uptime.
  • Teams that want fewer truck-rolls via smarter sizing and service-friendly wiring.

Sizing That Survives Winter

  1. Budget by energy/day. List each device’s typical watts × hours to get Wh/day. Include logger, radio, GPS time sync, and any heated sensors.
  2. Design to the worst month. Divide Wh/day by worst-month sun-hours to get panel watts.
  3. Account for losses (20–30%). Controller efficiency, wiring, temperature, DC-DC.
  4. Choose autonomy. 2–3 days for typical sites; 4–5+ days where snow or storms linger.
  5. Sleep smarter. Use duty cycles for radios/samplers; batch uploads when voltage recovers.

Example (logger + LoRa gateway):

Logger 0.6 W × 24 h = 14.4 Wh; Radio 1.2 W × 24 h = 28.8 Wh → 43.2 Wh/day.

Losses 25% → ~54 Wh/day. Worst month 2.5 sun-hours → ~22 W panel (round up to 30 W).

Autonomy 4 days → ~216 Wh battery (≈ 18 Ah usable @ 12 V).

Oblique view of assembled pole mount supporting a framed solar panel.

Placement & Mounting That Beat Oversizing

  • Height over shade. Mount above railings and nearby trees to avoid moving shadows.
  • Aim for winter. 30–45° tilt improves short-day harvest and sheds snow/ice.
  • Short, labeled wiring. Keep DC runs short; specify AWG per distance; add a drip loop at the gland.
  • Service on the ground. Enclosure at chest height with slack, labels, and a clear disconnect.

Power Architectures That Actually Work

  • Direct-DC sensor stacks. Panel → MPPT/PWM → 12 V battery → logger/radio via buck converters. Add low-voltage disconnect (LVD) to prevent brownouts and data corruption.
  • Mixed 5/12 V rails. Separate rails for radios vs. sensors to avoid noise; keep grounds clean.
  • Cold weather notes. Choose chemistries rated for site temps; spec vented or desiccant enclosures; leave air-gap under modules for cooling.

Build Your Weather-station Solar Kit

Work We’ve Delivered — Weather & Environmental

Customer / Use CaseSolution (key components)Panel & ConstructionOutcome

Hilltop Weather Mast

Panel above cross-arms; 35° tilt; chest-height enclosure; labeled in-line fuse; winter re-aim

Framed 30 W; stainless clamps

No snow-day gaps; cleaner winter voltage traces

River Level + Rain Gauge

Separate rails for radio vs. sensors; surge path to ground; torque-marked fasteners

Framed 20–40 W; air-gap under panel

Stable uploads in storms; no nuisance resets

Farm Soil Station

Logger + LoRa node; weekly voltage/harvest check; color-coded harness; desiccant pack

20–30 W array; 30–45° tilt

Fewer site visits; steady data through cloudy spells

Urban Air-Quality Node (PM)

Enclosure heat-managed; IR fan duty-cycled; direct DC into sensor/MCU; injector removed to save overhead

Small array + buck converters

Lower idle draw; improved nighttime runtime

* Harvest varies with season, shading, temperature, and duty cycle. For exact sizing, send device datasheets and duty profile.

Frequently Asked Questions

Solar power for weather and environmental stations

How do I size for short winter days without overbuying?

Budget energy/day, design to worst-month sun-hours, add 20–30% losses, then pick autonomy (2–5 days) based on your weather risk.

Can one small panel run a sensor stack and a radio all year?

Often yes for low-draw stacks—if the panel is placed above shade, aimed for winter, and paired with proper charge control and autonomy.

Do I need MPPT?

MPPT helps with winter/partial shade and higher-voltage strings. For single 12 V modules and modest loads, a quality PWM can be sufficient.

How do I avoid data loss during storms?

Use an LVD to prevent brownouts, spec adequate autonomy, and batch uploads when voltage recovers.

What about cold-weather batteries?

Select chemistries rated for site temps; consider heater mats only if harvest and enclosure allow.

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