Anseo said:
May I ask for advice on another aspect of solar panels folks.
This time it is controllers:
As I understand we have MPPT and PWM controllers, MPPT claims approx 30% efficiencyperformance over WPM.
But, if say I opted for a 200w WPM panel as against a 150w MPPT (the price difference is considerable), would this make sense as a purchase option.
My reasoning being that the greater outer output of the 200w panel may somewhat negate the benefits of of a 150w MPPT; the approx 50% cost difference does very much come into play in this (for me).
May I have your views folks ?
Hi Anseo
Did you mean that you are trying to decide between a 150 watt Maximum Power Point Tracking
controller and a 200 watt Pulse Width Modulation
controller?
Or do the different wattages apply to a choice of solar
Panels?
In the case of solar controllers, sometimes also known as regulators, the wattage that is shown refers to what it can safely handle, not the output which comes from the panel.
This means that if the maximum output of your solar
panel is 200 watts then whichever solar regulator (controller) that you buy has to be capable of safely regulating 200 watts.
MPPT controllers are more efficient than PWM models, but they are more expensive as you have seen. Don't be misled by the word 'tracking'.
The regulator actually 'tracks' the charge level of your leisure battery and allows any excess voltage to be converted to amps to pass to the battery depending on how much charge the battery needs. The MPPT controller will allow constant trickle charging.
The power output of your solar panel is therefore controlled (or regulated) for optimum charging efficiency.
A Pulse Width Modulator controller (sometimes known as a Shunt controller) is a bit like an on / off switch.
Power is fed to the leisure battery at a set rate until a certain charge level is reached, and then the controller 'shunts' (or switches off the power) until the charge drops below a certain level, then it's on full blast again.
Click Here to read about the differences between the two systems written by somebody much brighter than I am.
Personally speaking, if budgetary considerations are an issue I'd opt for an inexpensive PWM controller to see how solar power works for your own requirements.
If you decide that solar is the future for you, there's time to save up and replace the cheapo PWM with a more expensive and better engineered MPPT system.
You might decide that the PWM does a good enough job (I did, my £15 version has been doing it's job for years) and alternate between off ehu solar powered weekend rallies and sites with ehu (electric hook up)