Solar Panels – how many?


I see a lot of questions come up about how much solar do I need to charge my batteries? Whilst the general consensus is double you battery AH in Watts (so a 100AH battery ideally has a 200w solar panel, 400AH of batteries should have around 800w of solar), there are many other factors to consider.

We are running 280AH of lithium batteries and I have 510w of solar panels, a little below the rule of thumb. One 150w fixed to the roof and two separate portable panels (200w and 160w) so I can point them to follow the sun. In an ideal world (mid day when the sun is closest to us, all panels are spotless, very little mist or particles in the air and very close to the equator), these should put out 510 watts. For a 13.5v charge rate that equates to just over 37 amps. I only have a 30 amps controller so the most I could ever see is 30 amps. However, I am currently on the southern half of the WA coast, the day is crystal clear and its mid March. At the peak of the day I just reached 313 watts, giving me 22amps going toward the batteries. So I have lost 200 watts in just being away from the summer and further south. (testing over Christmas gave the full 30 amps of the controller)

Ok, so I still have 22 amps going into my batteries, I should be happy right? I am using around 20% of my batteries over night (Lights, TV, portable fridge/freezer, Starlink internet etc), so needing around 50AH to be fed back into the batteries during the day. Solar input at this location and time ramps up to 22amps by around 10am, reasonably constant to about 3.30pm then ramping back down – this is a no brainer and should be full again by Lunchtime. Perfect, and it sometimes works that way…

However… We also work 3 days a week, my old gaming laptop (a dinosaur that needs updating) pulls around 9 amps whilst charging then only runs for about 3 hours on battery, Catherine’s MacBook around 8 amps while charging for a total of 17 amps. The inverter itself uses about 1.5 amps, Starlink about 3.5 amps, portable Fridge/Freezer averages about 3amps, plus phones charging etc. You can see we are now well over the 22 amps coming in (around 25amps when both laptops charging). So I have nothing going into the batteries as all the power being generated is being used by running equipment, plus still draining another few amps from the batteries. Then we run the coffee machine at 100 amps for a couple of minutes etc and we are going backwards, not forwards.

So the bottom line of this post was not to say don’t do it, but to say you need to look at your entire situation, what you will be running during the day when charging with solar, how much you will be draining the batteries at night when they are not charging, where you panels are mounted (how efficient will they be) and how much you really need. For us, I can see we need a second 30 amp charger and double the solar to keep us going whilst working.

And that’s of course only if its sunny… If we get a few days of cloud, we would need a generator running most of the day to get any charge into the batteries! (Kings have their 2000 watt inverter petrol generator on special for $398 at the moment..)

Just some food for thought!

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