peteyzenn said:planning a wide, weather resistant wood frame cradling the length of the panels. rubber insulated mounting.
Ah hah said the blind man!
Yeah I envisioned adding a length of aluminum angle stock but that 'wood' work too!
peteyzenn said:planning a wide, weather resistant wood frame cradling the length of the panels. rubber insulated mounting.
jimindenver said:I have been dealing with a lot of uncared for batteries out here so please, please, please get some controllers that can be set up properly for absorb voltage and time allotted.
John61CT said:In order for a bank to get to the 100% Full required for longevity, the owner needs to have a controller whose charge profile can be customized.
Absorb voltage needs to be held long enough for trailing amps to fall to (endAmps) of .005C, or half an amp per 100AH capacity.
If this doesn't happen most days automatically, you are murdering your bank.
Even the top brands usually have default settings that drop to Float way too early.
aka premature infloatulation
There are a few controllers that work off a shunt-based ammeter to measure actual endAmps at the bank; that is the ideal.
But 99% require you to trial and error with egg-timer settings until you see it working properly, as ling as your load consumption usage patterns are consistent.
I hope you don't think your being a woman has anything to do with it, other than perhaps your self-confidence to figure this stuff out.Van Lady said:I am willing to bet there is not one woman in 100 that understands your post. I sure don’t. It is a totally foreign language. I believe that is why Jim is running across so many neglected batteries. I do not want to neglect my batteries, but if my isolator does not charge them correctly while I am driving or my generator does not charge them correctly when I run it, what am I supposed to do?
John61CT said:I hope you don't think your being a woman has anything to do with it, other than perhaps your self-confidence to figure this stuff out.
Yes 75% of learning any new topic area is learning the jargon, vocabulary specialized for that topic.
If you go through my post(s) and google phrases I'm sure you will quickly learn a lot.
If you get stuck on one part, feel free to post specific questions and many here including myself will be happy to help you learn.
On this particular issue, read your controller's user manual and google to make sure you understand, you'll see similar terms from here and pretty soon it starts to make sense.
Or of course you can ask someone to help you in person or even just do it for you, many here talk about doing just that, sometimes even for free.
Sleep said:Jim, can you please elaborate on the section above?
jimindenver said:It isn't just women that I have been helping out here. Many people think it is like their car that you just put the key in and turn it. They think that the kit or controller they bought will take care of everything without them needing to understand anything about it. The gear is failing them because they are led to believe it will by advertising or recommendations. Kits and some pro installations are done with the companies bottom line in mind not your best interest. Under wiring and cheap controllers are the hallmark of this and the people have no idea. All they know is that they have solar and it should all be okay.
Burbanlife said:Jimindenver, would this controller the EPEVER 20A MPPT be a good unit that can adjust voltages to the AGM UB121000 batteries? I have 2 of those and just installed a Isolator. I have the Renogy wanderer controiller and Two 100 watt panels, but after reading this I am looking into this controller. Thanks here is the controller : https://www.amazon.com/EPEVER-Contr...words=epever+20a+mppt+solar+charge+controller
jimindenver said:Doing a bit of research it is confusing. In one answer it is said to get user defined settings you need a different controller but in others it talks about using the remote panel for setting it up and the ability to get the proper cord to connect a PC and get programing for logging and parameter settings. What those settings are I have not determined.
In any event I do know this is a older model now often seen rebranded. The newer 2215BN can be had for a bit more but you have to buy the MT50 separately. Around the $150 range but it does have user defined settings in the description.
I'm a little puzzled by the different capacity per PV cell count. But setting that aside, yes very configurable and value priced if you match the panels to get 30A.akrvbob said:the Blue Sky 3000i
peteyzenn said:you can consider solar panels as a battery. sure it's good to match all the battery and in line, but if you are using it in parallel, in small quantity, small gains you get from all the mppt and amperate balancing won't make much difference, not to pay out in the long end. unless you got some impressive amount of wattage to deal with, if you are doing a van roof setup, i would just go with a simple pwm rather than mppt.
if you intend to go with more than 1000w max, then by all means go to mppt.
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