Uncle Sam
Member
I have tried to study and understand sizing solar panels that are designed for RV use. I have a load that I want in my RV that uses 23 watts on a continuing 24/7 basis. It is winter time and the solar panels can only charge the battery and run the device about 8 hours per day. The device runs on 120 VAC and needs an inverter which is OK. The solar panel is primarily used to charge the 12 VDC battery and the battery runs the device through the inverter.
The information I read about these solar panels is that they produce about 17 VDC and maybe 4-6 amps of current. It takes only 14 VDC to charge a 12 VDC battery, so can I get 6-8 amps (or more)of charging current from these panels to keep the battery recharged from the night time drain?
I have never used solar before, so I have no practical experience for understanding. My calculations indicate I need about 100 watts of solar panel capacity to run the device and recharge the battery with only 8 hours or so of daylight or sun. Is this even feasible or are my calculations all wrong? Don't hesitate to correct my numbers if they are wrong; I just want to learn.
Uncle Sam
The information I read about these solar panels is that they produce about 17 VDC and maybe 4-6 amps of current. It takes only 14 VDC to charge a 12 VDC battery, so can I get 6-8 amps (or more)of charging current from these panels to keep the battery recharged from the night time drain?
I have never used solar before, so I have no practical experience for understanding. My calculations indicate I need about 100 watts of solar panel capacity to run the device and recharge the battery with only 8 hours or so of daylight or sun. Is this even feasible or are my calculations all wrong? Don't hesitate to correct my numbers if they are wrong; I just want to learn.
Uncle Sam