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On Feb 9, 8:33 am, Jeff wrote:
Geoff Schultz wrote: Jeff wrote in : Geoff Schultz wrote: Get a controller that diverts voltage above the maximum charging voltage of the battery to a resistive load. In my case this is the water heater with 12V and 120V heater elements. 100% of the power of the solar panels will go to charging the panels up to that point. You can't produce more power than the panels are generating. I personally use a Morning Star TriStar controller to control both my wind generator and solar panels and it works great. -- Geoff So, are you saying that if the panels are putting out 17 volts and the battery is only taking 14, then 3 volts are applied to the heater? I don't think that's the way it works. That's exactly what I'm saying. It's called Diversion Mode and on the controller you set the maximum voltage which is allowed to be applied to the batteries. Anything above that is diverted to the load. The only time that this occurs is when the batteries are fully charged. The vast majority of the time the charging load of the batteries drops the output of the solar cells to a voltage less than the maximum allowable voltage and thus nothing is diverted. For details please see the manual: http://www.mrsolar.com/pdf/morningstar/TS_Manual.pdf Yes, this is how the tristar works. And for some people, it works fine. However, for those of us whose power usage far exceeds the charging ability, the diversion mode would rarely be turned on. In my case, it would only happen if I had just run the engine, and at that time the water tank is fully heated. The diversion mode is suited to boats with excess generating capability, such as trade wind passagemakers with wind or hydro generation. For systems where the solar panels will fall behind the load, the new MPPT (Maximum Power Point Tracking) systems will generate more power at the battery. Many panels will put out up to 17 Volts, and their Wattage will be rated at this level. A normal regulator will reduce this to an appropriate charging Voltage, perhaps 13.5 Volts if the battery is discharged. However, the current is not increased so the net Wattage will be reduced. A MPPT controller is a DC-DC converter that will drop the Voltage down without reducing the Wattage. An 85 Watt panel that can put out 5 Amps at 17V will put out 6.3 Amps at 13.5 and stay up at 85 Watts. A normal controller would only allow 67 Watts. Thus, the controller is not "creating more power than the panel outputs," its adjusting the Voltage so that 30% of the power isn't thrown away. As I've said, I've watched the current go from 8 to 10 Amps when the MPPT is turned on.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Yes, i agree. I want to add my support again for this explination and any negative comments (except maybe those negative comments against practical sailor's reliability) that followed my post early in this thread are unjustified. Let's face it, the affordable controllers that have historically been available are simple an did little more than keep the voltage at 12.6 volts, and if the voltage of the batteries exceed the voltage of the panels, the controller will prevent the batteries from draining. In this arrangement, the panels were setup with enough cells to insure that 12.6 volts would be reached in overcast days (or they would be useless), which means on sunny days you end up with 18 even 19v. New controllers can match the panels to the batteries better ... and without any snake oil, you get more bang out of your solar cells. In regards to practical sailor, they have demonstrated their independence and willingness to tell it like it is, perhaps that is a better description than reliable. If they measure a 25% increased output in AMPS with the new technology controllers, I can take that to the bank. However I will concede there are problems with some articles. When it comes to bottom paints, I realize as I read the articles the limits to their testing. To be really scientific and valid the tests would be repeated on a second set of samples by a different organization or employees, but it's amazing what they do for limited $. The article on winches was just way off the mark. Also they recently had an article on 2006 editions of two books in regards to 12V boat systems, that was extremely poor, one of the books in fact does not have such an edition. I could not get a response back from them when I pointed it out. Perhaps the loss of their star editor has a big influence, I don't think he would have let that article on Winches fly. But .. it is real refreshing to read their articles, especially boat reviews. I am getting tired of reading boat reviews in sail magazine that are absolutly meaningless, and really hate to read words such as "we only had light winds today, but judging from this boats design it will be a real performer" ... do meaningful journalism, go out and sail the boat again on a windy day would you ? In that light, Practical Sailor looks reliable to me, just not scientifically so. |
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