II have a very similar question, I think, except I leave the system in place so I do not have to bring them home to charge on my house solar system. I have done 2 other small systems which have lasted years but both were 12v and I am trying to confirm the math for a 24v PV array with 12v batteries.
I have been off grid at the cabin for 25 years but solar for 8 years with a 50 watt mono 12v panel and a 12v controller. It has been adequate but only marginally so. Weekend sees the batteries go from 12.6 to 12.2 and then recharge when I am gone. I was there 6 days in Nov and ran them down to 12.0 with very little sun. Not a lot of load.
I have recently received 2 175w 24v 2 year old panels. This would increase my capacity by 7 fold. The 2 batteries are 125 ah 12v agm. the panels and the batteries are a given for cost reasons.
I need a controller which will work for the panels and batteries either singly or in paralell @ 12v. each panel is Voc 44v, Vmp 35.2v Imp 4.95A, Isc 5.2A
Max load 4A to four 12v 13w each lights. usually more like 1A from lights and a cell phone charging. I run 1 of the 13w 12v lights for about 8 hrs. and another simultaneous for about 4 hours. Southern tier of NY. Need to know if I need a 30A or 40A controller to keep panels from blowing up the controller?
It looks like from the calculation above that I would need either 2 mppt controllers at 20A, (175/12= 15A) for two separate feeds to two 12v battery bank in parallel or 1 40A (350/12 = 30A) from 2 panels to two 12v batteries in parallel? I am considering two controllers from two separate panels to the batteries in parallel since i go there 10 weekends a year and I don't want to get there and have had 1 component go and have to go back to coleman lanterns for the weekend. Not sure if a 30A controller has enough fudge which I think should be about 25%.
If I went the series route and made 24v battery bank from 2 batteries could I use 1 15 or 20A pwm controller and a 24-12v dc-dc inverter without a lot of loss? i know mppt is better but cost is a factor here. 60% of 350 would be 3 1/2 times what I have been living with and more than adequate for now. I could always go to an mppt when the pwm goes down.
My question is how to size the controller(s) with the batteries and panels I already have in a cost effective manner.
thank you
I have been off grid at the cabin for 25 years but solar for 8 years with a 50 watt mono 12v panel and a 12v controller. It has been adequate but only marginally so. Weekend sees the batteries go from 12.6 to 12.2 and then recharge when I am gone. I was there 6 days in Nov and ran them down to 12.0 with very little sun. Not a lot of load.
I have recently received 2 175w 24v 2 year old panels. This would increase my capacity by 7 fold. The 2 batteries are 125 ah 12v agm. the panels and the batteries are a given for cost reasons.
I need a controller which will work for the panels and batteries either singly or in paralell @ 12v. each panel is Voc 44v, Vmp 35.2v Imp 4.95A, Isc 5.2A
Max load 4A to four 12v 13w each lights. usually more like 1A from lights and a cell phone charging. I run 1 of the 13w 12v lights for about 8 hrs. and another simultaneous for about 4 hours. Southern tier of NY. Need to know if I need a 30A or 40A controller to keep panels from blowing up the controller?
It looks like from the calculation above that I would need either 2 mppt controllers at 20A, (175/12= 15A) for two separate feeds to two 12v battery bank in parallel or 1 40A (350/12 = 30A) from 2 panels to two 12v batteries in parallel? I am considering two controllers from two separate panels to the batteries in parallel since i go there 10 weekends a year and I don't want to get there and have had 1 component go and have to go back to coleman lanterns for the weekend. Not sure if a 30A controller has enough fudge which I think should be about 25%.
If I went the series route and made 24v battery bank from 2 batteries could I use 1 15 or 20A pwm controller and a 24-12v dc-dc inverter without a lot of loss? i know mppt is better but cost is a factor here. 60% of 350 would be 3 1/2 times what I have been living with and more than adequate for now. I could always go to an mppt when the pwm goes down.
My question is how to size the controller(s) with the batteries and panels I already have in a cost effective manner.
thank you
Comment