[draft]
These charging sources lend themselves to planning in whole days because they are either ON or OFF, available or unavailable:
Joe Campervan requires 1,000Wh (1kWh) per day. He will fully charge his bank at home before leaving on a 2-day campout.
He needs 2 days of autonomy to make it through the weekend before the bank is effectively empty.
If he is on shore power at an RV park for one of those days then (from a power perspective) his time off-grid is only 1 day, so his total requirements and required capacity is halved. This is true because shore power is effectively limitless; you are not offgrid.
Solar and alternator charging are different.
Alternator charging is a bit more arithmetically complex because it involves both time the engine is running and the bank's current acceptance in Amps from the alternator.
Let's assume Joe is driving 1 hour per day and is running a a 30A DC-DC charger to charge his Li bank. The DC-DC will produce ~400Wh of charging daily1). So now the bank only has to cover 1,200Wh on the outing rather than the whole 2,000Wh. (2,000Wh - (2 days x 400Wh charging)). So now he only needs ~117Ah of Li (1,200Wh / 0.8 usable / 12.8v nominal).
The fractional way to think about this is, after alternator contribution, he only needs 1.6 days of reserve rather than 2.0 to get through the weekend.
In any given 24hr period solar will make at least //some// power no matter the weather conditions or actions of the owner.
Solar harvest is highly variable based on time of year and geographical location.
There are a couple of approaches here:
Mount whatever you choose. 100w? 200w? Sure, it's all gravy anyhow. If the solar averages 400Wh/day then the math is the same as the alternator example above.
This scenario is completely different; your solar implementation isn't a matter of choice but rather is driven by insolation models. It requires paneling for the worst average monthly conditions3). The practical result is the setup will meet needs in the worst month and have a great deal of excess power in the best month. It also means that, theoretically, Joe only needs one day of autonomy because the panels will replace the Watt-hours every day.
The decision between larger bank vs smaller bank + field charging is up to Joe. The frequency and duration of his outings will affect the cost/benefit analysis.
If his requirements are modest and outings are short and infrequent he might buy enough Wh to make it through his campouts with zero charging.
If his requirements are heavier or outings longer, more frequent (or even full-time) then it is no longer practical to buy enough Wh to cover the outing; he will need some amount of field charging. If he is overlanding/roadtripping he might lean into alternator charging. If he will be camping in place he might invest more in solar.
In general, larger banks are cheaper by the Amp-hour.
A C-rate is a fraction of the charge or discharge current bank capacity divided by the bank capacity. A 10A load on a 200Ah bank is 0.05C (10A/200Ah).
Different battery chemistries have C-rates they can tolerate, and C-rates they prefer for performance and longevity. We will use LiFePO4 for following examples.
LFP prefers 0.2C charging (20A per 100Ah of capacity) and will tolerate 0.5C (50A per 100Ah). This doesn't usually come into play with solar since it's such a “soft” charging source, but it can be critical with alternator charging since the possible currents are higher and the charging duration short.
Having a larger bank could allow you to charge harder from the alternator4), Amp-wise, and still stay within the 0.5C limit. Using the alternator scenario above, we are now running a 60A DC-DC instead of the 30A unit.
If your LFP has a 0.5C constant discharge rating then doubling the Ah capacity doubles the load current you can apply to the bank.