Jun-02-2019 04:50 PM
Jun-05-2019 07:55 PM
Jun-05-2019 07:05 PM
Jun-05-2019 05:57 PM
ajriding wrote:time2roll wrote:GATJcampers wrote:If you remove the panel from the battery and short the panel terminals together then what is the amp reading on the meter? s/b close to 5 amps at noon or the Isc rating.
With no load on the rv and the batteries still connected I set clamp to DC amps and got .45. Batteries still at 12.1. I understand you say it can take days but I've done that and they are just not charging. I'm sure some of that is my lack of understanding but it just doesn't seem like the panel is any help.
I do have a volt meter also.
MrWizard pointed this out.
DO NOT SHORT THE SOLAR PANEL WIRES OUT. Do not connect the solar panel positive to the panel negative, this will destroy the panel. The guy did not mean to "short" anything, rather to put a multi-meter on it, and "short" is not the correct term…. But if you just measure the voltage straight off the solar panel you should see 20 volts in good sun. If less than 18 then you probably have a bad panel. If less than 12 then it is trash.
Always use a good charge controller, not the $12 ones. You will spend $80 or more. Sun Saver makes one I have been happy with, and it has some heft to it.
The batteries from an auto parts store are almost always decently charged, not sure about Sam's Club, probably they were charged at the factory and never again.
Always get the newest batteries that you can find. Always get ones of the same age if you are running in parallel (for 12 volts systems), for 6 volt in series this is not an issue.
One 100 watt panel is enough to keep batteries charged, but not a lot to boondock. If you plan to use DC power off just the solar consider at least 200 watts, 300-350 if far north, cloudy/rainy a lot, or in the winter (low sun angle), or have kids that constantly charge devices.
If you plan to use an inverter and run a lot of household things then you need more…
Jun-05-2019 05:40 PM
time2roll wrote:GATJcampers wrote:If you remove the panel from the battery and short the panel terminals together then what is the amp reading on the meter? s/b close to 5 amps at noon or the Isc rating.
With no load on the rv and the batteries still connected I set clamp to DC amps and got .45. Batteries still at 12.1. I understand you say it can take days but I've done that and they are just not charging. I'm sure some of that is my lack of understanding but it just doesn't seem like the panel is any help.
I do have a volt meter also.
Jun-04-2019 01:11 PM
GATJcampers wrote:Clean panel with NO shade pointed direct at the bright sun on a clear day around 1 pm seems weak. Very weak.
Did some test today
Voc 19.75 (label says 21.6)
Isc test with leads in the plug 0.0 amps
test by short circuit with clamp meter 2.85 (5.74 on the label)
not sure what it means. panel bad?
Jun-04-2019 12:41 PM
GATJcampers wrote:
Did some test today
Voc 19.75 (label says 21.6)
Isc test with leads in the plug 0.0 amps
test by short circuit with clamp meter 2.85 (5.74 on the label)
not sure what it means. panel bad?
Jun-04-2019 12:17 PM
Jun-03-2019 11:08 AM
Jun-03-2019 10:15 AM
GATJcampers wrote:It's possible, but it's more likely to show lower voltage as well due to damage to parts of the panel.
Is it possible to be defective and show 20 + volts? Maybe it's giving hardly any amps? Thoughts?
Jun-03-2019 10:01 AM
GATJcampers wrote:
Unfortunately that last test wasn't at noon, it was more like 3 pm. When I open circuit tested the panel it was giving 20 + volts. Is it possible to be defective and show 20 + volts? Maybe it's giving hardly any amps? Thoughts?
Jun-03-2019 09:34 AM
2oldman wrote:X2GATJcampers wrote:My experience is that's not how it works.
The charge controller has a cut in of 13 volts and a cut out at 14.2 volts. I expected it to be in between those numbers. Not the battery volts(I understand 12.7 is full) but during the charge I expected it to be between those numbers..
Discharged batteries will see a slow rise in voltage to the numbers you expect.
Jun-03-2019 08:27 AM
GATJcampers wrote:My experience is that's not how it works.
The charge controller has a cut in of 13 volts and a cut out at 14.2 volts. I expected it to be in between those numbers. Not the battery volts(I understand 12.7 is full) but during the charge I expected it to be between those numbers..
Jun-03-2019 08:12 AM
Jun-03-2019 06:52 AM