Just something to think about when you want to compare DIY panels to manufactured. Here is a link for another solar panel and there are more out there if you look.
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Building a series of panels from scratch. One for camping, the other for my home...
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Sadly, there is no easy way to DIY a PV panel. Building one for fun, experience is great. But for serious power production, it's going to fail rather quickly (less than 2 years, a little more if you are in a desert).
Moisture build-up is the main killer. Glass is water vapor proof. Good rolled metal is pretty tight too. But glues, epoxy, paint, all leaks water vapor, and it builds up inside the panels as heat cycles suck air in and out of the panel.
And getting useable cells/wafers is tough. Anything off fleabay is really factory rejects. The factories test for a couple dozen failure modes, and consumers can only test about 3 of those parameters: (volts, amps & thermal heating from reverse leakage - if you have an IR camera).
In the DIY section, is a link to instructions hosted by fieldline forums, that's the best DIY system I've seen.
http://www.solarpaneltalk.com/showth...ar-panel-build
you still need EVA and tedlar, special designed plastics, to block water vapor.
And every cell you have flexed, you have to re-anneal to remove the micro cracks you caused.
Thank you! This is exactly what I need.Leave a comment:
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I thank everyone for their input, but when people tell me something cannot be done, I tend to try anyway, rather than sitting down and giving up. If I lose money I lose money, but I will learn a heck of a lot more than if I just sat back and never tried to begin with.Leave a comment:
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To add to that if money is a concern and you plan operating on Solar battery, you have no biz thinking about solar because the electricity will cost you many times more than what you can buy it from the power company.Leave a comment:
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Bear with me, here.
200 watt solar panel. It's on sale for $260.63.
Here are 200 watts of solar cells, tabbed wire, flux pen, free shipping, $100.00.
I can't buy a small sheet of glass, an aluminum border, a substrate backing, and epoxy for $160?
Let's say I save up $400.00. That's 800 watts of cells.
If I can successfully treat the cells with something, and keep them waterproof, then all I have to do is to is place them inside of a structure that will protect them.
What you are saying is correct if I were to buy panels a thousand watts at a time, then there's not much I can do to match the cost. But the issue is, I cannot *buy* panels at 1,000 watts a piece, or 2,000 watts.
What I am asking for is help building my own panels. I will check out the other threads about the epoxies.
All we are trying to say is not get too deep into the DIY because while it may be fun and educational to build your own pv panel it is not cheap to do and will end up spending way more than what you thought it would. If you are concerned about money then don't go down the path thinking DIY is less expensive.Leave a comment:
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Bear with me, here.
200 watt solar panel. It's on sale for $260.63.
Here are 200 watts of solar cells, tabbed wire, flux pen, free shipping, $100.00.
I can't buy a small sheet of glass, an aluminum border, a substrate backing, and epoxy for $160?
Let's say I save up $400.00. That's 800 watts of cells.
If I can successfully treat the cells with something, and keep them waterproof, then all I have to do is to is place them inside of a structure that will protect them.
What you are saying is correct if I were to buy panels a thousand watts at a time, then there's not much I can do to match the cost. But the issue is, I cannot *buy* panels at 1,000 watts a piece, or 2,000 watts.
What I am asking for is help building my own panels. I will check out the other threads about the epoxies.
No one says you have to buy 1000 watts of panels at a time, start with a 100 to 200 watt panel. But be warned you cannot use homemade panels on your home, that will get you into serious trouble.Leave a comment:
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Bear with me, here.
200 watt solar panel. It's on sale for $260.63.
Here are 200 watts of solar cells, tabbed wire, flux pen, free shipping, $100.00.
I can't buy a small sheet of glass, an aluminum border, a substrate backing, and epoxy for $160?
Let's say I save up $400.00. That's 800 watts of cells.
If I can successfully treat the cells with something, and keep them waterproof, then all I have to do is to is place them inside of a structure that will protect them.
What you are saying is correct if I were to buy panels a thousand watts at a time, then there's not much I can do to match the cost. But the issue is, I cannot *buy* panels at 1,000 watts a piece, or 2,000 watts.
What I am asking for is help building my own panels. I will check out the other threads about the epoxies.Leave a comment:
-
Sadly, there is no easy way to DIY a PV panel. Building one for fun, experience is great. But for serious power production, it's going to fail rather quickly (less than 2 years, a little more if you are in a desert).
Moisture build-up is the main killer. Glass is water vapor proof. Good rolled metal is pretty tight too. But glues, epoxy, paint, all leaks water vapor, and it builds up inside the panels as heat cycles suck air in and out of the panel.
And getting useable cells/wafers is tough. Anything off fleabay is really factory rejects. The factories test for a couple dozen failure modes, and consumers can only test about 3 of those parameters: (volts, amps & thermal heating from reverse leakage - if you have an IR camera).
In the DIY section, is a link to instructions hosted by fieldline forums, that's the best DIY system I've seen.
http://www.solarpaneltalk.com/showth...ar-panel-build
you still need EVA and tedlar, special designed plastics, to block water vapor.
And every cell you have flexed, you have to re-anneal to remove the micro cracks you caused.Leave a comment:
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To build them to the ISO standards of manufactured panels, no, nobody can.
Then you might as well tell everyone who wants to make their own to not even try, because they are unable to achieve cleanroom like cleanliness, and ISO standard manufacturing practices. Nope - very few can make carry out the manufacturing process well and even fewer seal the finished panel where is will last.
Forget it. I want to try anyway. Have fun
I am hoping to get some tips, because I can build a quality producing panel. It might not be pretty, or nitrogen purged. Nitrogen purged? Forget it
To start, what kind of adhesive I can use would be helpful. If I can encapsulate the cells in a type of flexible resin that does not dampen UV light, or any light, then I am on my way to making a durable panel no matter how else I decide to assemble it. There are threads here with that kind of information in them
I take it there's no adverse reaction to encapsulating a tabbed cell in clear, flexible Silicone? Yep - that is about the last thing you want to use
Does anyone know what type of resin is used in a manufactured panel, to protect the individual cells?
Again, look at old posts in the DIY section - What people are trying to say is that you can not buy the components as cheap as you can a completed panel -Leave a comment:
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Then you might as well tell everyone who wants to make their own to not even try, because they are unable to achieve cleanroom like cleanliness, and ISO standard manufacturing practices.
Forget it. I want to try anyway.
I am hoping to get some tips, because I can build a quality producing panel. It might not be pretty, or nitrogen purged.
To start, what kind of adhesive I can use would be helpful. If I can encapsulate the cells in a type of flexible resin that does not dampen UV light, or any light, then I am on my way to making a durable panel no matter how else I decide to assemble it.
I take it there's no adverse reaction to encapsulating a tabbed cell in clear, flexible Silicone?
Does anyone know what type of resin is used in a manufactured panel, to protect the individual cells?Leave a comment:
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Thank you for that.
I cannot afford to buy the panels, even one at a time. I think buying 1KW or more of the cells, then putting them behind glass and sealed will be cheaper than buying the panes already assembled in any capacity but bulk. (Or for thousands of dollars at a time, which I don't have.)
Also, I live in a mobile home in the rural mountains, where there is no electricity. I am not sure if there is a code here, or if there is I will put them on a shed or over "there".
You have been led to believe you can easily wire those cells together and make a quality producing solar panel. While it has been done by others there is a high learning curve on what to do and what not to do in the process. Keep asking the questions and one of the DIY panel makes will give you some direction.
As for what russ and Sunking stated. In the end it will be less expensive to purchase a 200 watt manufactured quality panel (~ $1/watt) then to build 200 watts of panels from the parts.Leave a comment:
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Leave a comment:
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Thank you for that.
I cannot afford to buy the panels, even one at a time. I think buying 1KW or more of the cells, then putting them behind glass and sealed will be cheaper than buying the panes already assembled in any capacity but bulk. (Or for thousands of dollars at a time, which I don't have.)
Also, I live in a mobile home in the rural mountains, where there is no electricity. I am not sure if there is a code here, or if there is I will put them on a shed or over "there".Leave a comment:
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Actually you are making things more expensive by trying to make panels. You can buy manufactured panels for less than you can make them. One other thing is there is no code compliant way to use DIY panels on you home.Leave a comment:
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