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#1
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I would very much appreciate to understand the "state of the art" on
solar panels on board. Best suppliers and best experience ? Thanks Manlio |
#2
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Manlio:
I cruised for a few years with 200 watts of solar panels on board. These supplied 1/3 to 1/2 of my power requirements. Here are some observations: 1. Solar panels cost about $5 per watt. Big ones less, small ones more, flexible panels more. 2. There are 17 volt (open circuit voltage) panels that can be used without a controller (if you are careful) and there are higher voltage panels that absolutely require a controller (to charge a 12 V battery). 3. MPP (maximum power point) controllers are about double the cost of a standard controller, but produce 10% or so more power. I wouldn't bother unless I had more than 100 watts of panels. 4. A good rule of thumb is that a 100 watt panel will produce 33 amp hours of power on a full sun day. More at lower lattitudes and less at higher, more in the summer, less in the winter. 5. Mounting is a real problem on a boat. I mounted one large rigid panel on the dinghy davits and sewed three flexible panels to the bimini. The flexible panels were more tolerant of partial shading due to their internal diodes. 6. Wire your panels with large gauge wire. I used 10 gauge. My panels put out about 13 amps at full output and I wanted to minimize votage drop. Protect the wiring with a breaker or fuse. You can use a cigarette lighter outlet to charge your boat's batteries. Electrons can flow both ways and the lighter outlet is usually circuit breaker protected. This scheme won't let you use a controller but is great for smaller panels. There are lots of suppliers. Google (or Froogle) solar panels and you will get lots of hits. I like Backwoods Solar Electric Systems. Run by real off gridders. The foregoing should get you started. Go to the suppliers sites and read what they have to say. David |
#3
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On Oct 20, 11:11*pm, "David Marchand" wrote:
Manlio: I cruised for a few years with 200 watts of solar panels on board. These supplied 1/3 to 1/2 of my power requirements. Here are some observations: 1. Solar panels cost about $5 per watt. Big ones less, small ones more, flexible panels more. 2. There are 17 volt (open circuit voltage) panels that can be used without a controller (if you are careful) and there are higher voltage panels that absolutely require a controller (to charge a 12 V battery). 3. MPP (maximum power point) controllers are about double the cost of a standard controller, but produce 10% or so more power. I wouldn't bother unless I had more than 100 watts of panels. 4. A good rule of thumb is that a 100 watt panel will produce 33 amp hours of power on a full sun day. More at lower lattitudes and less at higher, more in the summer, less in the winter. 5. Mounting is a real problem on a boat. I mounted one large rigid panel on the dinghy davits and sewed three flexible panels to the bimini. The flexible panels were more tolerant of partial shading due to their internal diodes. 6. Wire your panels with large gauge wire. I used 10 gauge. My panels put out about 13 amps at full output and I wanted to minimize votage drop. Protect the wiring with a breaker or fuse. You can use a cigarette lighter outlet to charge your boat's batteries. Electrons can flow both ways and the lighter outlet is usually circuit breaker protected. This scheme won't let you use a controller but is great for smaller panels. There are lots of suppliers. Google (or Froogle) solar panels and you will get lots of hits. I like Backwoods Solar Electric Systems. Run by real off gridders. The foregoing should get you started. Go to the suppliers sites and read what they have to say. David Hi David, Thanks for the great info. I'm interested in using solar to power a Frigoboat refrigeration system while I'm off the boat (I typically sail just 2-3 days a week in season -- I'm in Maine). Could this be wired directly into the Frigoboat or should it go through a battery bank? Jeff |
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