hankaye wrote:flboy, Howdy;
Nice lookin' solar arrey. Where did ya get the panels? How many watts are you pullin from ol' Sol?
Where you droppin' the wires through the roof?
Inquisitive ol' fart ain't I ???
hank
Thanks.. The Panels are 100W Mono-crystalline Renogy panels. I bought them through Amazon a while back @ ~$1.10 a watt. I bought 4 first because I figured my need was 400W of panels assuming a certain efficiency. I learned later that I could get about 20% more out of them at certain times by tilting them some. Honestly, living in the south, that should not make too much difference, but at higher latitudes, it does add up. Nevertheless, not knowing where my travels may take me, I looked at the hardware and considered the hassle of getting up there to tilt them, spacing for cast shadows and etc., and decided it was easier and more cost effective to buy another panel to compensate and call it done. Theoretically, I should have 500W with full sun directly overhead, but if I am averaging 350W on a sunny day, I'll be satisfied. I did get the MPPT controller/charger which is much better than the PWM controller, especially in cloudy conditions

To drop the cables through the roof, I have made extender cables with mating MC4 connectors to join to the panels existing wires(that is what I did today). With the wires extended, I can home run each panel off to the side of the trailer on the roof directly overhead of my Electrical cabinet. I am then taking a regular 115VAC type outdoor junction box that seals weather tight and I have built two terminal blocks (one + and one -). My plan is to connect each cell to the terminal blocks and then feed just two 8 Gage wires (+ and -) to the charger/controller through the roof from inside the junction box. Once through the roof and before the controller, I'll run it through a 40A fuse block just to protect the wires if something goes crazy with the controller. I can't imagine what to reverse the flow, but I had the fuse block so I am going to use it. I will seal the Junction box down with Dicor tape and a few small screws to hold it down
Having the terminal block will allow me to easily connect more cells if I go crazy with more cells and batteries. In any case, that's how I decided to do it.