We're on the verge of leaving for a little over 2 weeks of elk camp and I've got a question on the use of two solar panels I've come up with. My plan is prolong the life of the 12v batteries we use to power our tent lights.
One panel is blue glass (126 sq. inches), the other is dark brown (66 sq. inches). The blue one puts out 9. 75v in full sun, the brown one 10. 9v in full sun. Was not able to check amp output since we had the multimeter set on 250ma and blew the fuse.
The blue panel does mention 1. 2 amps on the specs tag, but to a photovoltaic dummy, that sounds wrong.
My question is how to best take advantage (cheaply) of these two panels. Since the batteries are 12v and neither panel makes 12v, how much benefit should we expect to see. One opinion is that any positive flow is better that a discharge. Makes sense to me.
Since we leave in 4 days, I don't have time to order anything to maximize this application, just looking for simple home-brew solutions to get the most power into our battery.
Thanks, Ronnie
One panel is blue glass (126 sq. inches), the other is dark brown (66 sq. inches). The blue one puts out 9. 75v in full sun, the brown one 10. 9v in full sun. Was not able to check amp output since we had the multimeter set on 250ma and blew the fuse.
The blue panel does mention 1. 2 amps on the specs tag, but to a photovoltaic dummy, that sounds wrong.
My question is how to best take advantage (cheaply) of these two panels. Since the batteries are 12v and neither panel makes 12v, how much benefit should we expect to see. One opinion is that any positive flow is better that a discharge. Makes sense to me.
Since we leave in 4 days, I don't have time to order anything to maximize this application, just looking for simple home-brew solutions to get the most power into our battery.
Thanks, Ronnie
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