Mar-21-2020 08:16 AM
Apr-10-2020 05:00 PM
babock wrote:StirCrazy wrote:Gotta love the BS that people think. He tested it with the weather he had at the time. Was May in Maine!
good one, notice how they don't show perfect weather... two reasons, 1 much smaller difference between the two, and
2 when do you every have perfect weather when you camp 😉
the only thing I wish they would have shown is when trees cast shadows over the pannel so you have 1/2 the pannel shadowed out, that's the biggest difference.
Steve
Apr-09-2020 05:21 PM
StirCrazy wrote:Gotta love the BS that people think. He tested it with the weather he had at the time. Was May in Maine!
good one, notice how they don't show perfect weather... two reasons, 1 much smaller difference between the two, and
2 when do you every have perfect weather when you camp 😉
the only thing I wish they would have shown is when trees cast shadows over the pannel so you have 1/2 the pannel shadowed out, that's the biggest difference.
Steve
Apr-09-2020 04:48 PM
bpounds wrote:
Worked for me. This is the first link offered.
Tested PWM versus MPPT
Here is the short and sweet of it:
Apr-09-2020 09:18 AM
Apr-08-2020 07:35 PM
Apr-08-2020 06:08 PM
pianotuna wrote:https://lmgtfy.com/?q=Compare+the+performance+of+PWM+vs+MPPT
Let's see a link.
Apr-08-2020 05:03 PM
babock wrote:pianotuna wrote:LOL...if you don't understand the math how an MPPT or a PWM work, there are a lot of sites that will explain it to you. I couldn't explain it any simpler. BTW EE here. I have done designs using both methods of controlling voltages/currents for years. It's not something new.babock wrote:
All I did was give an example of performance for a PWM vs MPPT for an example 100W 20V solar panel. I didn't put a cost comparison..just a technical operating difference. Those were factual numbers....not an opinion.
And all I'm suggesting is that you post a link to that testing and those numbers.
Apr-08-2020 02:08 PM
bpounds wrote:Exactly. The only time I would buy a PWM controller, which I just did, was for a simple small wattage panel to keep my boat battery topped off while it is sitting at my dock.
We shouldn't even be having the PWM vs MPPT discussions these days. The info is out there for anyone who wants to even briefly study the question.
Price difference is so small now that PWM only makes sense for the smallest system, and when there is no chance for future increase.
You might even save most of the cost difference by using smaller conductors and higher voltage if there are more than 2 panels in the array. And who doesn't want as much energy as possible out of their investment?
Apr-08-2020 02:06 PM
pianotuna wrote:LOL...if you don't understand the math how an MPPT or a PWM work, there are a lot of sites that will explain it to you. I couldn't explain it any simpler. BTW EE here. I have done designs using both methods of controlling voltages/currents for years. It's not something new.babock wrote:
All I did was give an example of performance for a PWM vs MPPT for an example 100W 20V solar panel. I didn't put a cost comparison..just a technical operating difference. Those were factual numbers....not an opinion.
And all I'm suggesting is that you post a link to that testing and those numbers.
Apr-08-2020 08:40 AM
Apr-08-2020 08:12 AM
babock wrote:
All I did was give an example of performance for a PWM vs MPPT for an example 100W 20V solar panel. I didn't put a cost comparison..just a technical operating difference. Those were factual numbers....not an opinion.
Apr-08-2020 04:44 AM
babock wrote:StirCrazy wrote:All depends on the specs of the panels. The lower the voltage of the panel used, the less difference there is.pianotuna wrote:
babock,
It would be good to provide a link to back up statements.
I do prefer MPPT myself.
in theory what he said is right, but in real world with both setups ideal I would probably expect a 1 amp difference.
Steve
Apr-07-2020 07:30 PM
StirCrazy wrote:All depends on the specs of the panels. The lower the voltage of the panel used, the less difference there is.pianotuna wrote:
babock,
It would be good to provide a link to back up statements.
I do prefer MPPT myself.
in theory what he said is right, but in real world with both setups ideal I would probably expect a 1 amp difference.
Steve
Apr-07-2020 07:16 PM
pianotuna wrote:All I did was give an example of performance for a PWM vs MPPT for an example 100W 20V solar panel. I didn't put a cost comparison..just a technical operating difference. Those were factual numbers....not an opinion. You have to decide for yourself if it's worth the cost difference....which in my opinion is a pretty low difference.
babock,
You have offered an opinion.
Folks want to see studies that prove MPPT works better than PWM.
An ideal study would compare the payback time for the difference in cost.
For example, in 2005 my system panels cost was $5.50 per watt. Going to MPPT saved on the cost of the system, making a zero price difference between MPPT and PWM, at $1700.00. In 1990 I had a 30 watt system--which cost about $1700.00
Since then the price of panels has dropped precipitously but charge controllers not so much. The lowest price was, before artificial tariffs were introduced $0.36 cents per watt, retail.
That makes it cheaper to add another panel rather than switching to an MPPT controller, provided there is room on the roof.
So, today, my system would have a fully featured PWM controller rather than MPPT, if cost were the only criterion. But cost is not the only factor, and the price of a large capacity controller is a one time cost.
If the roof has no more room left, then MPPT to gather every erg of power may make sense.
My dream system would have remote actuators for tilt, and an MPPT controller with a system input voltage of at least 70 volts, and 2000 watts of panels.
So I suggested you to present a study that proves your opinion.