โApr-27-2013 06:23 AM
โApr-29-2013 12:56 PM
โApr-29-2013 11:42 AM
โApr-29-2013 11:33 AM
Salvo wrote:
If you "hard" shade a portion of a panel the diodes will conduct. The diodes will not conduct from "soft" shade. A tree some 20 meters away will create soft shade. Your TV antenna will create hard shade.
โApr-29-2013 11:22 AM
โApr-29-2013 11:14 AM
smkettner wrote:
Need a test on this.
โApr-29-2013 11:00 AM
โApr-29-2013 10:47 AM
smkettner wrote:Salvo wrote:
If however an entire panel in a series string is shaded, the string will output a fraction of its power. Advantage goes to parallel.
If one panel in three is shaded what is the voltage drop of the diodes? I thought it was 2 to 6 volts. But I don't know.
โApr-29-2013 10:33 AM
โApr-29-2013 08:43 AM
Salvo wrote:
If however an entire panel in a series string is shaded, the string will output a fraction of its power. Advantage goes to parallel.smkettner wrote:
Except these large panels have bypass diodes that divide the panel in three sections. In parallel a small amount of shade will pretty much take out that panel completely. Series does not shut down the entire array for a few cells getting shade.
โApr-29-2013 08:27 AM
smkettner wrote:
Except these large panels have bypass diodes that divide the panel in three sections. In parallel a small amount of shade will pretty much take out that panel completely. Series does not shut down the entire array for a few cells getting shade.
โApr-29-2013 04:37 AM
โApr-29-2013 04:18 AM
โApr-29-2013 04:12 AM
โApr-28-2013 09:19 PM
smkettner wrote:
large panels have bypass diodes
โApr-28-2013 03:52 PM
nomad 289 wrote:
Pretty convincing case to wire panels in parallel...
"if the panels are all wired in series, when one panel shuts down due to a palm-sized bit of shade, then the entire array of panels shuts down. A tree branch or part of a boatโs standing rigging or mast/boom can cause the entire array to shut down if it is wired in series."
roadslesstravelled-solar