<takes sip of coffee>
Combining panels with disparate specs on the same controller typically results in lower power harvest than with separate controllers.
They aren't. MPPT is negatively affected by inefficiencies that generally do not apply to PWM systems: buck conversion losses,
cell temperature derating, wiring losses, etc.
Sometimes these inefficiencies stack up so much that, in edge cases, PWM can make more power than MPPT.
You won't.
Average daily increase from MPPT is typically closer to 15%. The +30%-40% numbers are real, but only occur in circumstances when local panel/string Vmp is significantly higher than
Vbatt (battery voltage) and the system can take advantage of it. Bulk stage, for example. In float or late absorption there may be no MPPT advantage at all.
Whether or not +15% is worth 2x-3x the price is a matter for the consumer. Horses for courses. (I use MPPT, PWM, and shunt controllers for different purposes).
They can.
The PWM controller will have an input voltage max just like MPPT. You can charge a 48v battery from a 48v solar config with PWM for example.
Panel voltage can be much higher than that. Mine are running at 30.8v right now.
Doesn't work that way. Voltage is quite stable above 20% insolation (like shortly after daybreak). Current will vary based on conditions.
Depends on battery chemistry and number of cells.
? This is a controller spec. Mine goes to 150v, and some go higher. Some are as low as 23v.
When I blew a controller in the summer I put my 24v panels in parallel on a spare PWM to charge my 12v bank. The PWM ran the panels at Vbatt, which is effectively how PWM works.
Cloudy weather generally does not alter the voltage of solar panels.* In early morning or late evening insolation can drop below ~20% and voltage can crash, but
so little power is available at those times that it is not a compelling argument for series arrangements. (I use series but not for that purpose).
MPPT is typically most efficient (lowest buck losses) when panel voltage (Vpanel) is about 2x battery voltage. Check your MPPT manuals for the relevant efficiency curves.
Section of a panel is correct; that is the bypass diode's job.
Around any panel is incorrect, but it can be accomplished with external bypasses. Some controllers will also reduce overall string voltage to deal with shaded panels but that is a different (and more complex) topic.
For anyone who's read this far, I have attempted a rubric for choosing between MPPT and PWM in
this RVwiki article.
* it may affect the voltage at which MPPT runs the panels