Hey all,
I'm trying to teach myself how to fish and was hoping for some sanity checks on my research thus far.
I'm looking to manually calculate the required wire size for a given build. The formula I've come across a couple times is the one listed here: http://www.paigewire.com/pumpWireCalc.aspx
Let me know if I messed up the interpretation of allowable voltage drop!
Sanity checks regarding wire size:
Misc Sanity checks:
Charge controller questions:
Thanks so much for any help!
- Kyle
I'm trying to teach myself how to fish and was hoping for some sanity checks on my research thus far.
I'm looking to manually calculate the required wire size for a given build. The formula I've come across a couple times is the one listed here: http://www.paigewire.com/pumpWireCalc.aspx
Code:
Wire Circular Mils = (Conductor Resistivity)(Amps)(2)(One Way Distance in Feet) / Allowable Voltage Drop Allowable Voltage Drop = volts * percent voltage drop as integer // allowable voltage drop for a panel with a 12 volt VOC and a 3% voltage drop would = 12*3
Sanity checks regarding wire size:
- Am I right in thinking you then need to use a table to convert from circular mils (CM) to American wire gauge?
- When calculating allowable voltage drop for the panels, use cumulative VOC from panels if in series, or singular VOC if in parallel
- Are the voltages for the other components (charge controller to batteries, batteries to inverter) simply the system voltage (12, 24, etc.), or is there another number one should use, similar to VOC for the panels?
Misc Sanity checks:
- When calculating max amperage, multiply by 1.3 to account for edge of cloud effect? Does anyone think you should go higher or lower? Is there an industry-standard for this? Does this multiplier change depending on the size of your system? (aka 1.3 for small systems, 1.4 for house sized systems, etc.)
- When calculating total panel voltage, should you multiply by anything to account for things like edge of cloud effect? I swear I read something that recommended multiplying by 1.1
Charge controller questions:
- Does one have to take max VDC, max Amps, AND max wattage into account when selecting the appropriate charge controller? It just seems redundant that a charge controller also lists max wattage. Can a combination of high VDC and high amperage somehow overload the charge controller even if these stats individually fall below the charge controller's max specifications?
- Assuming one never wanted to upgrade with more panels, how much headroom should one allow for max VDC, max amps, and max wattage? AKA if I'm running at 99% of max specs, is my charge controller going to die an early death?
Thanks so much for any help!
- Kyle
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