โApr-28-2022 12:21 PM
โJan-23-2024 11:08 PM
Hello!
I want to buy myself a portable solar panel Acenew 200 W.
Or is it better to buy a stationary panel?
โMay-06-2022 08:41 AM
โMay-05-2022 05:04 PM
Gdetrailer wrote:Well there you go OP. It was already all packaged up for you. That takes the guesswork out of it.
Oh, yeah, by the way, there are lots of solar powered fan systems like what the OP wants to do which does not use a battery, does not use a charge controller and does not use a timer..
SEE HERE
One sample of many to choose from..
$139 here
โMay-05-2022 04:57 PM
โMay-05-2022 03:07 PM
โMay-05-2022 02:53 PM
2112 wrote:
You said "inductance is an AC thing...". Actually you wrote "a AC thing" but I'm not the grammar cop.
I guess I should have been more direct and replied "inductive reactance is an AC thing, inductance affects both AC and DC circuits".
I continued by providing a few examples where "inductance" in a DC circuit can be either beneficial or detrimental. You somehow interpreted this as I implied a LR filter suppresses back-EMF. You might want to re-read my post.
As far as DC motors not having the capability of creating detrimental EMF, some guy named Lenz might disagree. I sure could have saved the company a lot of $ not designing in those flyback diodes.
I could have saved them millions by not including those worthless little inductors on the DC power input pins of all those hot-swap signal conditioning modules. I would have been a hero.
And then, to finish it up, you accuse me of some scare tactic to get OP to spend a buck fifth on a blocking diode? WHAT?
โMay-05-2022 01:51 PM
โApr-30-2022 06:43 AM
2112 wrote:
"inductance" is an inductor thing. DC motors and solenoids have "inductance" which will create transient EMF with a fluctuating source voltage or current and back-EMF when powered off. Hence the use of a flywheel diode.
DC circuits are not "steady state" 100% of the time. They have to be powered on and off. A low pass LR filter is a common in-rush suppressor on DC capacitive circuits and circuits designed to be hot swapped. It wouldn't work without "inductance".
Regardless, my suggestion of a series diode was to protect from any unknown reaction of powering a large motor
But thanks for the lecture
โApr-29-2022 07:27 PM
โApr-29-2022 03:12 PM
2112 wrote:
I vote for hook it up and try it. You won't harm the panel. If it's an automotive radiator fan they are rugged. You may not get to full speed but see what you do get.
The fan is a big inductive load so placing a diode on the positive output of the panel may not be a bad idea. Plus the diode will lower the voltage a bit.
Come back and let us know how it worked out
โApr-29-2022 03:08 PM
valhalla360 wrote:
If the controller does require a battery, you also will need a timer.
If you put a battery in and the fan runs when there is voltage from the battery, the battery will tend to run down at night. Might last a few weeks but constantly running the battery to 0% charge will kill the battery very quickly.
โApr-29-2022 02:43 PM
โApr-29-2022 12:56 PM
ewarnerusa wrote:
Sounds like a nice controller, but now you'll need a battery. In fact, many controllers will be damaged if you hook solar input to them without having it hooked to a battery.
I'm not sure why someone said it needed to be an MPPT, we're talking a single 100 W 12V panel here. I'm not saying MPPT can't provide more than PWM, but on a small scale like this it is not something worth paying for.
Some controllers do have a "load" output which would do what you're trying with the fan. But I think would still need a battery.
โApr-29-2022 12:50 PM