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electrical:solar:pvwatts [2023/06/16 17:51] frater_secessus [results] |
electrical:solar:pvwatts [2025/04/05 22:39] (current) frater_secessus [PVWatts] |
| - find out how much panel is required to make a certain amount of Watt-hours (Wh) daily; or | - find out how much panel is required to make a certain amount of Watt-hours (Wh) daily; or |
| - find out how much power your existing solar setup can make | - find out how much power your existing solar setup can make |
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| | **IMPORTANT:** if you are depending on solar the system wattage **must be sized for location and least-sunny month** in which you will be camping. For full-timers in the northern hemisphere this is **wherever you will be in December**. |
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| | **Caveats:** the estimation method describe below assumes **the panels will have a clear view of sky**. No shade from trees, buidings, or [[opinion:frater_secessus:beginner_mistakes#mounting_or_deploying_panels_where_they_will_be_shaded|other things mounted on your van]]. No snow build-up on the panels, etc. |
| ===== how much panel do I need to make X watt-hours? ===== | ===== how much panel do I need to make X watt-hours? ===== |
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| ==== SYSTEM INFO ==== | ==== SYSTEM INFO ==== |
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| | Change TILT to 0, and accept the other defaults on this page. The other settings won't make a difference for what we want (Hours of **F**ull **S**un **E**quivalent (FSE), which will be given on the next page). |
| Accept the defaults on this page, as it won't make a difference in this case. All we want is Hours of **F**ull **S**un **E**quivalent (FSE), which will be given on the next page. | |
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| * your array size in **kW**. A kilowatt is 1,000w, so a 200w = 0**.**2kW (zero-point-two)((the calculator is set up like this because it is designed to model large residential and commercial installations that are measured in kW)) | * your array size in **kW**. A kilowatt is 1,000w, so a 200w = 0**.**2kW (zero-point-two)((the calculator is set up like this because it is designed to model large residential and commercial installations that are measured in kW)) |
| * accept the default losses for MPPT systems. PWM systems should use something like 30% | * accept the default losses for MPPT systems. PWM systems should use something like 30%((PWM doesn't really have 30% losses in the system; on average it leaves ~30% unharvested. The end result is the same, math-wise)) |
| * if your panels are flat (most are) adjust tilt to zero | * if your panels are flat (most are) adjust tilt to zero |
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