198 watts. More than enough in Summer, not quite enough in winter.
This wattage does not meet the battery manufacturer recommended bulk charging currents though. My flooded battery wants 10% of the 20 hour A/H rate. 13 amps. I can just make that in summertime, but the fridge and fans are still drawing a portion of that 13 amps
Too little solar might be able to replenish the amount used, but not meeting the minimum bulk currents will shorten battery life too.
Those with a lot of battery capacity and Not that much solar, should somewhat regularly, have a method to give the batteries a fast charging rate at 20% or higher of the total battery capacity.
So with Solar, more is better, and if you can afford 460 watts, and fit it on your roof, well, your batteries will simply last longer, even if a good portion of that wattage is wasted later in the day.
A temperature compensated hydrometer will tell you how well your solar is treating your batteries. I bet my charging amps vs battery capacity ratio is higher than most, yet after a week, My SG readings are only in the fair(1.250 range), and I have to crank up my charging voltages upto 16v for 90 minutes minimum to get the SG upto the maximum 1.280 baseline.
Without doing this the battery voltage sags more and more each night under the same loading, capacity used, and at the 3 week mark the battery will read 1.220 and perform badly overnight.
This is when the solar is doing 14.8v absorption and then holding 15v float for several hours afterward, each day.
Granted this is a peculiar battery, but it proves the blinking green light, means little.
A solar controller that allows one to change charging voltages is wise.
A total solar wattage which meets a minumum 5% of the 20 hour rate, is wise.
And A wattage able to bring the flooded battery to 16v is wise.
Do not leave devices/ appliances hooked to a battery being charged at 16v
For reference, After my Solar holds my group 31 USbattery Deep cycle battery at 14.8v for 2 hours, then 15v for 3 hours, to get it to 16V, takes 6 amps, and at least 90 minutes to get the SG back to 1.280, and that is weekly.
If I do not treat the battery to a weekly 16V equalization it performs abysmally.
Not all batteries will do this of course, but it appears the bigger the 12v battery, the higher voltages it needs to get the Sg back to baseline.
6v GC batteries require much less baby sitting to get the SG back upto baseline, and getting the SG back upto baseline is the goal, for ultimate battery performance and longevity, if one cares about such a thing.
After all batteries are only rented.