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  • russ
    replied
    From PV Watts - annual average insolation for Dhaka = 5.24 kW/m2

    For a 1 kW DC system projections-
    Low month July = 85 kWh AC
    High month March = 122 kWh AC
    Annual projection = 1264 kWh

    Russ

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  • Sunking
    replied
    Originally posted by jony lima
    somebody told me that a battery needs at least 10% of its total Amp. Is it true? i roughly desired to bye 260 watt panel. my charge controller type is PWM. can u tell me the accurate watts of panel sir?
    Well there is some fact and fiction with 10% charge current. PWM and MPPT charge controllers are very different animals.

    With PWM CC the Input current = Output current so if you wanted to say run a 12 volt @ 130 Amp Hour battery with a C/10 charge current (10%), you would have to select a solar panel with a Imp (current maximum power) or 13 amps. 13 is 10% of 130 right? However what wattage is that panel. Who knows it is not specified. With most 12/24 volt PWM charge controllers the maximum Voc (voltage open circuit voltage) can be as high as 55 volts, which means the Vmp (voltage maximum power) is around 42 volts. On the low end if you were to use a panel made for 12 volt battery system the Vmp = 17 volts. So what size panel would one need to supply 13 amps to a 12 volt battery system. Answer is anywhere from 220 to 550 watts. Quite a range huh?

    Here is where it gets educational. The panel size for a MPPT controller needed to supply 13 amps to a 12 volt battery is 170 watts period. Think about that for a while and what it means.

    The key to the mystery is the current, for PWM the panel Imp determines the current. For MPPT the panel wattage and battery voltage determines the current.

    So to answer your question would a 240 watt panel work with a PWM CC. Beats me, what is the Vmp & Imp of the panel? If the Vmp = 16 to 18 volts, and Imp = 13.3 to 15 amps it will work.

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  • Sunking
    replied
    Originally posted by jony lima
    Thanks a lot Sunking for ur response, my location is Dhaka, Bangladesh. i designed discharging battery 50% (approx 700 watts) everyday.
    Jony do you mean 700 watt hours? 700 watts is not a measurement of energy, just power. They are two different things.

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  • jony lima
    replied
    Originally posted by Sunking
    Jony technically you cannot charge a FLA battery in 6 hours. Maximum rate is 8 to 10 hours. However if you sized the battery correctly so that no more than 20% discharge in any one day, charge rate is not an issue.

    Since I have no idea of your location, if you based the battery discharge on 20% daily (300 watt hours), and what type of charge controller you have, all I can do is guess based on maximum size the battery can handle.

    If you use a PWM controller and use a standard 12 volt solar panel, 240 watt panel.
    If you use a MPPT controller, 170 watts.

    Thanks a lot Sunking for ur response, my location is Dhaka, Bangladesh. i designed discharging battery 50% (approx 700 watts) everyday. somebody told me that a battery needs at least 10% of its total Amp. Is it true? i roughly desired to bye 260 watt panel. my charge controller type is PWM. can u tell me the accurate watts of panel sir?

    regards
    jony

    Leave a comment:


  • Sunking
    replied
    Originally posted by jony lima
    Thank u Russ for reply,
    my location is Dhaka which is the capital Bangladesh. here we can get sun for 11 hrs approx a day in summer. a have a charge controller 10amp pwm.
    Sorry but that does not mean anything. Just because you may get 16 hours of sun does not translate to 16 Sun Hours. 12 volts and 130 amps does not mean anything either as you expressed it. 12 volts x 30 amps = 1560 watts which is just a measurement of power at a specific moment in time and is not a measure of energy which is watt hours.

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  • Sunking
    replied
    Jony technically you cannot charge a FLA battery in 6 hours. Maximum rate is 8 to 10 hours. However if you sized the battery correctly so that no more than 20% discharge in any one day, charge rate is not an issue.

    Since I have no idea of your location, if you based the battery discharge on 20% daily (300 watt hours), and what type of charge controller you have, all I can do is guess based on maximum size the battery can handle.

    If you use a PWM controller and use a standard 12 volt solar panel, 240 watt panel.
    If you use a MPPT controller, 170 watts.

    Leave a comment:


  • russ
    replied
    Hi jony - Welcome to Solar Panel Talk!

    What is your approximate location - it is need for anyone to comment.

    What will you be powering?

    Russ

    Leave a comment:


  • jony lima
    started a topic panel for 130 amp battery

    panel for 130 amp battery

    hi,
    i calculated my load which needs 130 amp lead-acid battery 12volt system. but i cant calculate the appropriate solar panel (watts) that can charge my battery in 6/7 hours.
    can u tell me the watt of panel and the amp of charge controller i should buy?

    thank to all

    jony
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