โAug-06-2016 09:42 AM
โAug-29-2016 01:37 PM
โAug-29-2016 12:58 PM
โAug-29-2016 10:17 AM
mike-s wrote:Almot wrote:For future reference, a quote is what's inside the quotation marks. I started with your comment because it was simply wrong, then expanded because other were, too.
And a lot of misquoted lines too :)...
โAug-29-2016 06:53 AM
webrx wrote:Amp-hours, not amps. 300 mA would seem to be an unrealistically large parasitic draw. What device(s) do you have which add up to that much?
if you have 300 ma parasitic draw you need to replace 7.2 amps a day (.3 x 24)
webrx wrote:??? Not sure how you make 15/2=1.25, or where any of those numbers come from. A 15 W "12 volt" panel would typically put out something less than 1 A at charging voltage (say, 13 V).
if you get 6 hours of good sunlight to charge you battery with, you theoretically (panel efficiency comes in here) need 1.2 amps charging an hour.
a 15 watt panel will put out 1.25 amps (15 / 2) again - theoretically
webrx wrote:Ah, you're talking about constant usage loads (like a refrigerator, or the switch which lights red when the water pump is turned on), not parasitic loads. That's completely different.
Reality, is a 40 to 50 watt is in my opinion the bare minimum you need to make up for parasitic loads and running the water pump for a couple showers, etc.
โAug-29-2016 06:40 AM
Almot wrote:For future reference, a quote is what's inside the quotation marks. I started with your comment because it was simply wrong, then expanded because other were, too.
And a lot of misquoted lines too :)...
Almot wrote:It's not. If it can be turned off and draw no current (as one might do during storage), it's not a parasitic load. A parasitic load is caused by a device which draws power even when off (like a car radio using power to keep station memory), or a device which simply can't be turned off (like a LPCO detector).
As to the parasitic draws, half the time people include the fridge draw in this - though I don't think this is correct.
Almot wrote:Messy? it's quite simple - he saw both banks go above 15V when using an unregulated 12W panel. He then goes on to show just how little current is needed to maintain the charge on a battery, e.g. 0.2 A (~3 W) to maintain a 400 Ah flooded lead acid bank.
PS: The linked article is a bit messy. He was charging 2 different banks, 220 AH and 125 AH, with a nominal 12V/12W panel, and measured overcharging on 220 AH AGM. This battery is AGM, very low self-discharge.
โAug-27-2016 07:59 AM
โAug-26-2016 06:21 PM
โAug-26-2016 04:19 PM
mike-s wrote:
A 12 W panel can ruin even a sizable battery bank by overcharging if used without a controller, so ignore those who claim 15 (or 50!) watts "is barely enough to provide the charge that your 2*6V lose in 24 hours due to" self-discharge/parasitic draw.
There's a lot of misinformation out there
โAug-26-2016 10:38 AM
โAug-25-2016 11:45 PM
โAug-25-2016 06:06 PM
โAug-25-2016 02:37 PM
โAug-25-2016 02:34 PM
โAug-25-2016 12:31 PM