Sunday, August 28, 2016

Re: [Electric Boats] Okay, planning my solar charging installation.

 

You are heading down the same road I am you are a bit ahead of me so I am watching closely and looking forward to pictures and results.

Best of luck

Nick b



Sent from my Bell Samsung device over Canada's largest network.


-------- Original message --------
From: king_of_neworleans <no_reply@yahoogroups.com>
Date: 2016-08-28 4:29 PM (GMT-05:00)
To: electricboats@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [Electric Boats] Okay, planning my solar charging installation.

 

I have been advised to get my MPPT controller first, and then get solar panels to match it. My goal is to end up with 2kw of solar charging capability, or as near to it as practical. I don't mind starting out with an array of maybe 4 100w 12v panels in series and adding to it as money appears. 400w of solar power is 400w more than I have now.

So I am thinking go initially with a controller that will easily handle all the PVs that I could possibly ever install, rather than start with a small one and upgrade. Just a quick browse on Amazon found this as an example:

Outback Flexmax 80 Amp MPPT Solar Charge Controller $533.00

Outback Flexmax 80 Amp MPPT Solar Charge Controller

 
I saw some with 40a and 45a ratings at 48v (battery) but they were not much cheaper than this one, and I figure bigger is better in terms of heat dissapation etc. I read the manual and apparently this unit is not very picky about PV array voltage. Output is adjustable, 12v to 60v. Not saying that this unit is the one I am going to get, just using this as an example.

BUT

I have heard of guys using several small controllers instead of one big one, even a mini controller for each panel. Is that a better way to do it, or is a single controller better? Note that I will also have a separate 12v emergency battery, controller, and panel for backup power to bilge pump, VHF, etc. so redundancy is not such a big issue.

Are there any issues I need to be aware of, regarding series/parallel connection of solar panels? If I avoid parallel connections then I would have to resort to multiple charge controllers, right?

I have no mast and boom, nothing to shade the panels, FWIW. They will be mounted on a flat hard canopy covering (and shading) pretty much the entire boat, even hanging aft over the stern if needed. I do not plan on tilting  or otherwise directing the panels. I don't think the tradeoff is a good one, for me. I need to keep mounting simple and sturdy.

Keep in mind that for me, money IS an object and I am not interested in absolute best equipment and methods if they cost significantly more. So any comments or recommendations from those with actual solar charging experience are welcome and appreciated.

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Posted by: 63urban <63urban@gmail.com>
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