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As you can see, point #1 above definitely applies to small installations on a van. Without any details, I can't really comment, it's pretty vague.
Point #2 I guess can be hit or miss. Part of it is the climate you're currently in. Another factor could be poor cooling of the panels themselves - for example, a glued down flexible solar panel would dissipate heat poorly. Conversely, driving down the road could cool the panels enough that climate isn't a big deal - but in that case you could be charging from the alternator anyways. If we were at the tropics where there is no winter then this would be a good reason to choose PWM. But I doubt anyone here is, we all go through winter when it is plenty cold for maximum value of MPPT. Fortunately, that's when we need extra power the MOST!! Power production drops like a rock in the winter!! The days are short and the sun is low, that means little power. Summer is the opposite, long days give you lots of power!! The sun is very high and a good angle to the panels=lots of power.
Point #3 above, I believe is the most misunderstood. MPPT will be of little added benefit if you're generating much more power than you're using, since the algorithm is only active while in bulk charging mode. If you're constantly in absorb mode, then there is no benefit at all over PWM. Simply put, if you're spending even an hour or two per day in absorb mode, then at the end of the day it's a wash. Sure, you collected power a little quicker and charged a little quicker in many instances - but if a cheaper controller would have got you to the same place by the end of the day by staying in bulk mode a little longer, then nothing was really gained. That's all a great theory for sunny days in the summer, But I can testify that it isn't all sunny days in the summer!!!!!!
Guess what, rainy days happen on a regular basis! After a week of rain, you're going to be really glad to get 100% and not flush 36% down the toilet!!!!!! Or if it's stormy, and you get three hours of sun every day for a week, again, you'll be really glad to get 100%, not 64% on those few hours of sun. Then, ALL winter, I want 100% all day because I need it!!!
**** Plan and BUY for the worst weather--not the best. ****
**** Plan and BUY for the worst weather--not the best. ****
**** Plan and BUY for the worst weather--not the best. ****
All I'm saying is that the MPPT/PWM debate should be a lot lower on the list than most people put it. On installations this small, the gain is pretty negligible, and even non-existent in many cases (especially where the system wasn't sized and matched correctly from the beginning, which many fall victim to). I respectfully disagree, based on 6 years of depending on solar. I began with a 50 watt panel that cost $350--and a MPPT controller. I'm up to 580 watt, and still a MPPT controller. Why do I insist on MPPT?
A group of us were in Flagstaff and we got 16 straight days of rain, we never saw the sun!!! Everyone ran out of power--BUT ME! Why? Am I magical?
**** I always Plan and BUY for the worst weather--not the best. ****
More important are the battery management features of the controller and overall efficiency of your electrical system.This I agree with totally!! Most people compare a $50 PWM to a $300 MPPT like the Blue Sky 30001 and say, "I'm not paying an extra $250 for MPPT!!!!" You're buying a whole lot more than MPPT. You're buying a 5 year warranty, American made, by a company that will really back it up and take care of you!! Call and ask a question and you might well talk to the owner or the EE who designed it and know everything abut it. More than anything your buying information about your system and control over it in many extra features that if you learn and use them could double the life of your battery. Without buying anything else you can set the absorption voltage and the time it holds it. In batteries like a $300 Lifeline, that's critical to getting your moneys worth out of it.
That $50 PWM will cut the life of your Lifeline AGM in half because it will never be charged the way it wants.!
Keep doing that and you'll beg to get a $300 Blue Sky!!
Bob