Kia ora from New Zealand.
I do the techie stuff for a non-profit community trust that brings wireless internet to a remote and mountainous part of Middle Earth where wizards and commercial ISPs fear to tread. It's been hard enough getting my head around wireless networking but a couple of our relays are on mountaintops needing remote power so I'm having to get up to speed on controllers and panels and voltages and batteries and the rest, so any help from you guys would be appreciated.
It's clear that the batteries at one of our sites are struggling, tho' I don't understand why. We've two BP 80W panels and an unnamed 85W Chinese panel charging two 120 a/hr flooded 12V batteries. The two BP panels run through a Xantrex C35 controller. The Chinese panel came with its own controller and a single A4 sheet of unhelpful Chinglish and as I wasn't sure if you can mix 80 W and 85 W panels on the same controller we installed its own controller on the 85W panel.
Demand from the routers and radios is somewhere between 1.0 Amp and 1.5 Amps 24/7.
It's clear, tho', that the batteries are buggered as voltage being delivered to the routers drops off quickly once the sun goes down and we're getting to the point that they are failing by the early morning and only able to successfully boot-up once the sun is up.
As we're going into winter here I need to get on top of these problems , and clarify some issues.
1. Is it right that the 80W panels and the 85W one need separate controllers or can I run all three panels through the Xantrex? The C35 is rated for 35 Watts so it should be man enough?
2 Could the two controllers be working against each other and the reason the batteries are not charging?
We're replacing the 2 x 120 a/hr flooded batteries with a single 325 a/hr AGM which costs a fortune so I don't want to bugger it.
3. It's been suggested that we add a little 200W wind turbine on the site rather than another solar panel there's no room for, as the site can get clagged in by cloud for days but there's always wind.
4. I understand the three panels at maximum output would produce 13.6 Amps while the turbine will wind up in a gale to 336 Watts and 16V before it shuts down. That's 21 Amps which means that with both systems flat out they'll be presenting the 35 Amp C35 with 34.6 Amps. Is that too close for comfort or just a theoretical maximum we'll never get to?
5. I also think from what I've read that we'd need to switch the C35 into load diversion mode - and most of what I've read (and little that I understood) of this means we need something to absorb the dumped load. Articles usually mention water or air heaters at 120V AC but that's for the US. Here all the gear is for 240V AC. Does that make a difference? As we're talking less than 600 Watts to be dumped an electric kettle - jug to you - element could do it? Or not? Does it need to be in water?
6. The Xantrex manual says the device disconnects the battery from the panels at night to prevent reverse leakage of power. Can it do that when the solar panels are connected directly to the battery in diversion mode or will we need diodes?
7. What happens when the panels try to put 18V into a 12V battery, and the wind turbine is only producing 14V?
8. Both produce voltages higher than the controller's equalisation charge which I believe you're not supposed to give AGM batteries. So how can it be good for the battery?
Thank you for your patience.
I do the techie stuff for a non-profit community trust that brings wireless internet to a remote and mountainous part of Middle Earth where wizards and commercial ISPs fear to tread. It's been hard enough getting my head around wireless networking but a couple of our relays are on mountaintops needing remote power so I'm having to get up to speed on controllers and panels and voltages and batteries and the rest, so any help from you guys would be appreciated.
It's clear that the batteries at one of our sites are struggling, tho' I don't understand why. We've two BP 80W panels and an unnamed 85W Chinese panel charging two 120 a/hr flooded 12V batteries. The two BP panels run through a Xantrex C35 controller. The Chinese panel came with its own controller and a single A4 sheet of unhelpful Chinglish and as I wasn't sure if you can mix 80 W and 85 W panels on the same controller we installed its own controller on the 85W panel.
Demand from the routers and radios is somewhere between 1.0 Amp and 1.5 Amps 24/7.
It's clear, tho', that the batteries are buggered as voltage being delivered to the routers drops off quickly once the sun goes down and we're getting to the point that they are failing by the early morning and only able to successfully boot-up once the sun is up.
As we're going into winter here I need to get on top of these problems , and clarify some issues.
1. Is it right that the 80W panels and the 85W one need separate controllers or can I run all three panels through the Xantrex? The C35 is rated for 35 Watts so it should be man enough?
2 Could the two controllers be working against each other and the reason the batteries are not charging?
We're replacing the 2 x 120 a/hr flooded batteries with a single 325 a/hr AGM which costs a fortune so I don't want to bugger it.
3. It's been suggested that we add a little 200W wind turbine on the site rather than another solar panel there's no room for, as the site can get clagged in by cloud for days but there's always wind.
4. I understand the three panels at maximum output would produce 13.6 Amps while the turbine will wind up in a gale to 336 Watts and 16V before it shuts down. That's 21 Amps which means that with both systems flat out they'll be presenting the 35 Amp C35 with 34.6 Amps. Is that too close for comfort or just a theoretical maximum we'll never get to?
5. I also think from what I've read that we'd need to switch the C35 into load diversion mode - and most of what I've read (and little that I understood) of this means we need something to absorb the dumped load. Articles usually mention water or air heaters at 120V AC but that's for the US. Here all the gear is for 240V AC. Does that make a difference? As we're talking less than 600 Watts to be dumped an electric kettle - jug to you - element could do it? Or not? Does it need to be in water?
6. The Xantrex manual says the device disconnects the battery from the panels at night to prevent reverse leakage of power. Can it do that when the solar panels are connected directly to the battery in diversion mode or will we need diodes?
7. What happens when the panels try to put 18V into a 12V battery, and the wind turbine is only producing 14V?
8. Both produce voltages higher than the controller's equalisation charge which I believe you're not supposed to give AGM batteries. So how can it be good for the battery?
Thank you for your patience.
Nothing you can do now except suffer or hope for Impeachment. Then we are stuck with JOE Blow. At least Joe would be a Lame Duck and marginalized.
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