โSep-12-2015 01:04 PM
โSep-12-2015 06:57 PM
โSep-12-2015 06:55 PM
โSep-12-2015 05:49 PM
JiminDenver wrote:
Here I go with my ignorant self again, seeing something and thinking I can figure it out. ๐
When I first got my original panels I talked to quite a few people including Mark at Rogue saying to run then on his 30a MPPT controller. I had told him they were different wattage as well as type but that didn't concern him at all. With all of my driveway test I realized that they never matched up in any way in any light. The 220w mono will gain a higher Voc in bright light than the 230w poly, but in low light it crashes while the poly still produces. Reading that somehow the controller tweaks the array made me think that the different voltages would have a adverse affect. I have never tried them together but I did know that I would have matching panels to mount.
Move forward to this spring when I got the Morningstar TS-MPPT-60 and did test adding the 230w poly into the three 250w polys as a mixed panel test. The 230w wasn't a match but it was of the same type and reacted to different light like the rest. What I saw was less output than I would have expected from the 970w total or even four 230w meaning that the whole array was being controlled by the low panel. Either should have easily maxed out the controller but the best I saw was 58 amps, close but no cigar. Looking at the grafts I saw that the array was providing over 800w at times but the controller was only using a portion of it and not much more than the three 250w panels could produce themselves.
Since my MegaWatt died I took advantage of needing to hook up something at home and ran the 230w schott poly and the 220w Canadiansolar mono together in series on the TS-MPPT-60. I set them out around 10 am in bright sun with a decent tilt/angle. The 220w had a Voc of 23.8v, to 230w 24.5v. When I hooked them in series I got 68v which would follow the concept of the lower panel controlling the voltage.
Now I know in parallel the 220w puts out 12a and the 230w puts out 15a here in Denver. In series they were maxing out at 23.8a which again would follow the concept of the 220w limiting the 230w.
What was interesting is the display on the controller was jumping up and down by a watt and a bit of a amp. It was doing it when the batteries were in absorb and close to what the 230w could do on its own so I unhooked the 220w and ran the 230w alone. As soon as I did that the watts and amps production settled to a solid amount.
So with like types the controller knows the watts are there but doesn't use them even though the load calls for it. With mixed types the controller seems to be having trouble settling. I'll have to set up the test again and do a log to see if the Vmp is changing that fast too meaning the controller can't find a sweet spot.
I know boring stuff, crude observations, probably way off base. Just posting what I see.
โSep-12-2015 05:37 PM
โSep-12-2015 02:35 PM
โSep-12-2015 02:00 PM
โSep-12-2015 01:38 PM
โSep-12-2015 01:12 PM