Connecting Different Watt Solar Panels
We recently received the following question from one of our users: Is it ok to connect a 100 watt and a 45 watt solar panel together ??? and what is the best way to do this to charge a battery bank the quickest?
In order to answer the question properly we reached out to a few of our engineering friends around the country and came up with the following: The answer is maybe...
If you just connect a solar panel to a battery, when there is light, the battery charges. But at night the solar panel looks like a resistor and will slightly discharge the battery. Completely discharging it over time.
So they usually put a diode between the panel and the battery. This diode does lose about 5 percent of the power (.5 volt drop, so more with a 6 volt system, less in a 24 volt) .5/6 about 15 percent 5/24 about 2 percent.
If the panels are the same voltage, and they both contain a diode to prevent reverse current, then yes you can.
A diode allows current to flow in only one direction. Much like a hydraulic check valve, or those gates at 6 flags that let the people move in only one direction :)
In short, must be the same voltage. Matched voltage even better. Both panels within a few hundreds of a volt. Both must have a diode, or both not have a diode and some kind of external power control to protect the battery.
Properly done, yes you can parallel the panels for more current.
In order to answer the question properly we reached out to a few of our engineering friends around the country and came up with the following: The answer is maybe...
If you just connect a solar panel to a battery, when there is light, the battery charges. But at night the solar panel looks like a resistor and will slightly discharge the battery. Completely discharging it over time.
So they usually put a diode between the panel and the battery. This diode does lose about 5 percent of the power (.5 volt drop, so more with a 6 volt system, less in a 24 volt) .5/6 about 15 percent 5/24 about 2 percent.
If the panels are the same voltage, and they both contain a diode to prevent reverse current, then yes you can.
A diode allows current to flow in only one direction. Much like a hydraulic check valve, or those gates at 6 flags that let the people move in only one direction :)
In short, must be the same voltage. Matched voltage even better. Both panels within a few hundreds of a volt. Both must have a diode, or both not have a diode and some kind of external power control to protect the battery.
Properly done, yes you can parallel the panels for more current.
SunPower Tracker solar tracking technology released
SunPower has released a new line of single-axis tracking systems for large-scale solar electric projects and power plants. SunPower already offers the highest efficiency photovoltaic solar panels commercially available for residential use, and it will be interesting to see if they make solar tracking technology available for residential use as well. The SunPower Tracker system has been in use for a while now, and has been proven to deliver more energy per land area than competing systems. The SunPower Tracker also has unique backtracking algorithms that allow the panels to tilt out of alignment with the sun at low sun...Headlines:
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