Forum Discussion
- Rail_DawgExplorer
MEXICOWANDERER wrote:
Picked up a 345 watt panel today which should apply enough amperage to properly charge the 2 Trojan T-105 AGM's.
Picked up a 345 watt panel today which should apply enough amperage to properly finish charge the 2 Trojan T-105 AGM's.
That’s the main reason we have the 8k generator I mentioned earlier.
Figured the gen would do the grunt work and the solar would get the batteries topped off properly.
Thanks to this forum we’ve picked up some great tips. - Rail_DawgExplorer
MEXICOWANDERER wrote:
If you have a 6 lane to one lane freeway bottleneck amperage because of too small of factory wiring you will be an unhappy camper.
Good point.
I always wire one gauge more than needed. - MEXICOWANDERERExplorerIf you have a 6 lane to one lane freeway bottleneck amperage because of too small of factory wiring you will be an unhappy camper.
- MEXICOWANDERERExplorerPicked up a 345 watt panel today which should apply enough amperage to properly charge the 2 Trojan T-105 AGM's.
Picked up a 345 watt panel today which should apply enough amperage to properly finish charge the 2 Trojan T-105 AGM's. - Rail_DawgExplorer
Almot wrote:
Rail Dawg wrote:
... I'm going to have roughly 350 watts at 24 or 36 volts going into a dual Trojan T-105 AGM 12 volt battery bank.
No, you are not :)
If bank is 12 volts, controller will detect it and will push only ~13 volts.
MPPT will convert high voltage of panels into lower volts and higher amps.
A=W/13V, so 350W will get you about 25A max, after all the losses.
I didn't word it correctly perhaps.
I was trying to say I would have 24 or 36 volts from the solar array going into the MPPT and then approx 12 volts going into the Trojans.
But you guys definitely are helpful.
Picked up a 345 watt panel today which should apply enough amperage to properly charge the 2 Trojan T-105 AGM's.
Looking forward to installing this system and seeing a good result. - AlmotExplorer III
Rail Dawg wrote:
... I'm going to have roughly 350 watts at 24 or 36 volts going into a dual Trojan T-105 AGM 12 volt battery bank.
No, you are not :)
If bank is 12 volts, controller will detect it and will push only ~13 volts.
MPPT will convert high voltage of panels into lower volts and higher amps.
A=W/13V, so 350W will get you about 25A max, after all the losses. - AlmotExplorer IIIWhy limiting yourself to 350W when you can have more?
30A*100V MPPT can handle 450-500W array.
Install 2*230W or 2*240W.
I am running 2*245W on 30A*100V MPPT. brulaz wrote:
My MC4 wire is rated 600 volts. And yes you can get a controller rated 600 volts input.
Watt limitation on solar wiring? I've only heard of the 30A limit on 10ga and 20A on 12ga. Always presumed that was good up to 100V, the usual mppt limit.
My home system uses the same wire but operates at 450+ volts to the grid tie inverter. Panels rated 3kW.Rail Dawg wrote:
The controller will limit power to 30 amps.time2roll wrote:
You only need a larger controller if you have more solar wattage.
Dumb question then can I double my solar wattage to say 36v 700 watts and still use the MPPT 100/30 controller?
Thanks.
You would have to get a higher rated controller or go 24 volt on the battery to pass through 700 watts.- 2oldmanExplorer II
brulaz wrote:
At different voltages, yes.
Watt limitation on solar wiring?
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