Feb-22-2014 12:12 PM
Feb-25-2014 05:26 PM
rexlion wrote:
I tried measuring the circuit between my solar panel and the controller today, but couldn't get a reading. I was wondering, should a digital multimeter (I have a Fluke 115) be able to read small amounts of current like 2 or 3 amps? My panel should put out a max of 4A in bright sun, but I would like to see what the actual output is in a variety of conditions (bright haze, cloudy, etc).
Has anyone done this or have ideas on an easy way to do it? Will a clamp meter (TRMS) do the job?
I know the system is functioning, because I can measure the voltage inside the trailer (in a 12V socket) and it goes to 14.14V when the panel is hooked up.
Feb-25-2014 01:03 PM
Feb-25-2014 05:36 AM
Feb-24-2014 11:28 PM
rexlion wrote:Readings are strange because the circuit is "strange". It is also possible that your meter is a lemon, or needs a fresh 9V battery.
I still don't understand why I get such strange readings
rexlion wrote:
I have found that the voltage in the TT interior (it has a cigarette-lighter style receptacle that I can easily check) runs as high as 14.3V during the midday charging, so that led me to believe that the converter is not reducing what the solar controller puts out.
Feb-24-2014 07:58 PM
Feb-24-2014 03:04 AM
Feb-23-2014 08:40 PM
Feb-23-2014 08:13 PM
Feb-23-2014 06:52 PM
BFL13 wrote:
The panel might be doing 8 amps but the almost full batteries might only take 2 amps.
When that is happening, you can get a freebie! Run a 6 amp load like a laptop on inverter, and you still get the 2 amps to the battery plus run the 6a laptop from solar
Feb-22-2014 03:46 PM
Feb-22-2014 03:27 PM
BFL13 wrote:
You first want to see what the panel is doing. For that take the Isc by disconnecting the panel from the controller's array side. Now put the meter across the two panel wires (ignore pos and neg, doesn't matter)
Feb-22-2014 03:09 PM
rexlion wrote:
I did all of the above. I am getting "something" but it's not right.
Feb-22-2014 03:04 PM
Feb-22-2014 02:19 PM