so it looks like a 70-80 degree elevation angle is what we'll go for.
MickinOz wrote:My 2 bob's worth:
Presumably, after a trip you'll have at 5 days between weekends to recharge.
MickinOz wrote:So even if your 100W panel only puts out 1/2 power for say 4 hours a day, you'll get 50w, say 4 amps, for 20 hours between weekends. 80 amp hours should be adequate?
Given the longer full sun hours you can expect to get in summer, I think its customary to angle the panel for best winter performance. However, if its only a maintenance charge required in winter you'll probably be fine even if you angle the panel for best summer performance.
MickinOz wrote:P.S. you write about installing a battery meter. Won't the renogy charge controller have all that? My Rover MPPT controller does.
noseoil wrote:45-50 degrees faced south & send it.
tony.latham wrote:so it looks like a 70-80 degree elevation angle is what we'll go for.
Our 7400-watt grid-tie system is about ready to be turned on. (Idaho's permitting process is a bit like a boar grizzly on a kill.)
tony.latham wrote:The panels are mounted on two pole-mounts that are easily adjusted for tilt with hand cranks. I've got a phone app that breaks the optimal angle if fixed or by month if adjustable. We're at 45º north, and it says they should be at 37.5º if they were fixed –-or 60º for optimal this month.
The app is free and called Optimal Tilt and accesses the GPS in your phone. You might do a quick download.![]()
tony.latham wrote:But you and I may be overthinking this.![]()
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Tony
bdosborn wrote:NREL has a free website that will let you estimate your solar production and its super easy to use:
https://pvwatts.nrel.gov/
You can input array size and tilt and it will estimate your harvest based on you location. It also factors in weather data and accounts for if you live in a cloudy area
Bruce
bdosborn wrote:NREL has a free website that will let you estimate your solar production and its super easy to use:
https://pvwatts.nrel.gov/
You can input array size and tilt and it will estimate your harvest based on you location. It also factors in weather data and accounts for if you live in a cloudy area
Bruce
My firm is doing the design....
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