It was some time ago and I'm not sure if they ever reached a conclusive conclusion.


shonky wrote:Hi, all.
Had a neighbour complaining about the lack of amps coming in from the moon - told him to hold his panel a bit closer to it.
Hi Miles, see I know your name now so if I used it a few hundred times I might remember itgrizzzman wrote:The best I have seen is 82 percent . Many of the solar forums suggest 77 percent when sizing a system.
Hi ya TerryT1 Terry wrote:Hi Miles, see I know your name now so if I used it a few hundred times I might remember itgrizzzman wrote:The best I have seen is 82 percent . Many of the solar forums suggest 77 percent when sizing a system.The general rule of thumb for lead acid charging of any type is 70% of the advertised solar capacity, scattered cloud and cloud edge effect can produce in excess of 100% but only for short periods. Located close to snow or a large body of water will improve the output to between 80% and 90% with the right cloud conditions.
The claim that MPPT will harvest more than a PWM controller of equal quality using panel with a similar Vmp voltage to the battery voltage is just a sales pitch as it requires rare conditions not really seen in Aust to achieve that improvement.
With lithium batteries and the solid state relay control method the rate can be better than 80%, I don't have a technical based answer for this except it's probably due to a combination of direct cable run to the battery reducing wiring losses, voltage sensing completely remote from the solar charging voltage so no additional voltage influence on the target voltage and the fact lithium batteries will maintain a lower voltage while charging than lead acid batteries resulting in a better voltage differential between the solar panel output voltage and the battery terminal voltage allowing the solar panel to dump more of the produced current rather than it being trapped in the solar panel.
No doubt that last part will be a contentious issue with the MPPT camp but in way or an explanation, the genuine Vmp voltage reduces significantly as the panel internals heat up resulting in a Vmp voltage sometimes being lower than the 14.4v or even 14.8v required for some lead acid batteries to fast charge, where anything above 13.6v will fast charge a lithium battery up to well above the 90% SOC mark.
T1 Terry