"look at my shadow in the picture, they only need about 20 degrees of tilt to be 90 degrees to the sun"
You lose amps when off by only 10 degrees and it gets worse over that amount. It is really worth the bother to get the tilt about right.
If the correct tilt at high noon is 30 degrees (top up from flat) as stated, then the sun's altitude would be 60 degrees. That is quite high for January! As mentioned, if you are at 35N and Dec is 21S, your noon tilt would be 56, making the sun's altitude 90-56 = 34
You can check by waiting till noon and put your voltmeter or ammeter on the disconnected array and tilt it up and down watching the Isc or Voc change. The Voc will drop as soon as the sun hits the panel, so wait till after that settles if you just took out the panel from the dark.
If you know your latitude and declination you can get the correct high noon tilt. Declination tables are probably on line somewhere. Runs from near 23N to 23S so your tilt angle is always changing.
Whatever your North latitude in January, if you stay there the tilt will be more than that now and be reducing. It will be equal to your Lat on 21 March, then get even lower until 21 June. Then it goes back the other way for the next six months.
So if possible, arrange to be able to change your tilt over the next few months to be lower and lower till 21 June. Try to stay under ten degrees off as correct tilt changes. Pick a number and change it once a month would be good.
Optimum for all day AH haul is lower than for the correct high noon angle if the array is pointing South all day. Idea is to let the shoulder hours sun get on the panel better. If you only deploy the array mid-day, then tilt up nearer the high noon angle.
You lose amps when the sun is off by only a little. 10 degrees has a loss. The sun goes around at 15 degrees an hour, so you lose a lot by not being able to twirl it. Tilting is not so bad because there is much less angle it can be off optimum as the sun goes up and down.
If you did have a twirler, then the tilt for that is the other way for optimum. Now you want the tilt higher in the shoulder hours than at mid-day to be aimed at the lower sun.
EDIT--looking at photo, you must have the same concern about using the awning. Perhaps ? since that array is only 11 pounds? the whole tilting business could be solved by laying the array out on top of the awning! Set awning angle for proper tilt. (PT is always talking about having his awning made from solar cell material
๐ )
1. 1991 Oakland 28DB Class C
on Ford E350-460-7.5 Gas EFI
Photo in Profile
2. 1991 Bighorn 9.5ft Truck Camper on 2003 Chev 2500HD 6.0 Gas
See Profile for Electronic set-ups for 1. and 2.