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Solar Panel

devildog1971
Explorer
Explorer
I have a new northern Lite and the solar panel is not working is there a fuse? and if iso does anyone know where to look for it it is nor in the inverter converter box with the other fuses and circuit breakers. Thanks
2019 Northern Lite 10-2 EXCDSE Dry Bath 2007 G M C dually crew cab and 2018 Harley Davidson Limited Low
33 REPLIES 33

work2much
Explorer
Explorer
full_mosey wrote:
work2much wrote:
full_mosey wrote:
What happens if you blanket an entire panel in a series or parallel array?



HTH;
John


In parallel you will only kill the production of that panel. For 3 panels, one covered you will still have 2/3 production. In parallel each panel contributes separately. Think of three hoses filling a bucket vs series where the three hoses are connected together with a single discharge into the bucket at a higher psi. The flow is limited by the smallest diameter hose in series where in parallel each hose can fill at their own rate.


OK, using the hose analogy, if you have three hoses in series and you step on ANY location ALL current stops.

HTH;
John


Yes, that's essentially what you will see in the videos I posted and what I experienced myself testing both.Big drop in production. In full sun without shade series is better but not by much. In shade I had much better results with parallel. My results were pretty spot on with what the Wynns and Per found going through the same exercises in those videos.
2022 Ram 3500 Laramie CTD DRW Crew 4x4 Aisin 4:10 Air ride.

2020 Grand Design Solitude 2930RL 2520 watts solar. 600ah lithium. Magnum 4000 watt inverter.

full_mosey
Explorer
Explorer
work2much wrote:
full_mosey wrote:
What happens if you blanket an entire panel in a series or parallel array?



HTH;
John


In parallel you will only kill the production of that panel. For 3 panels, one covered you will still have 2/3 production. In parallel each panel contributes separately. Think of three hoses filling a bucket vs series where the three hoses are connected together with a single discharge into the bucket at a higher psi. The flow is limited by the smallest diameter hose in series where in parallel each hose can fill at their own rate.


OK, using the hose analogy, if you have three hoses in series and you step on ANY location ALL current stops.

HTH;
John

work2much
Explorer
Explorer
full_mosey wrote:
What happens if you blanket an entire panel in a series or parallel array?



HTH;
John


In parallel you will only kill the production of that panel. For 3 panels, one covered you will still have 2/3 production. In parallel each panel contributes separately. Think of three hoses filling a bucket vs series where the three hoses are connected together with a single discharge into the bucket at a higher psi. The flow is limited by the smallest diameter hose in series where in parallel each hose can fill at their own rate.
2022 Ram 3500 Laramie CTD DRW Crew 4x4 Aisin 4:10 Air ride.

2020 Grand Design Solitude 2930RL 2520 watts solar. 600ah lithium. Magnum 4000 watt inverter.

work2much
Explorer
Explorer
It's not what I saw on the internet. I went through the time and energy to do these tests myself. When you string three panels together in series you only pass the amperage of the weakest panel. That's not an opinion.

I guess we will will have to agree to disagree. Shade on a panel essentially makes it an unbalanced system as if one of the panels is 150 watts instead of 250. The basics can be found here of solar panels in series vs parallel where unequal panels provide different amperages.

https://solarpanelsvenue.com/mixing-solar-panels/
2022 Ram 3500 Laramie CTD DRW Crew 4x4 Aisin 4:10 Air ride.

2020 Grand Design Solitude 2930RL 2520 watts solar. 600ah lithium. Magnum 4000 watt inverter.

full_mosey
Explorer
Explorer
What happens if you blanket an entire panel in a series or parallel array?



HTH;
John

CA_Traveler
Explorer III
Explorer III
work2much wrote:
You are correct in that a diode will cut 20 cells or 1/3 of the panel. That panel now will be making 1/3 less amperage. Panels connected in series are limited by the production of the weakest panel so the entire string is now making 2/3 of its potential.
You are incorrect. The bypass diode act like a direct short and the Voltage across the diode goes to 0V and the diode passes all of the amps ie Now the 3 panels have 8/9 of the volts with full amps. ie 89% of the power of the 3 panels not 67%.

I get that your mind is made up based on whatever your saw on the internet. But I really don't want to continue and try to teach you basic electronics 101. So let's call it a draw.
2009 Holiday Rambler 42' Scepter with ISL 400 Cummins
750 Watts Solar Morningstar MPPT 60 Controller
2014 Grand Cherokee Overland

Bob

work2much
Explorer
Explorer
CA Traveler wrote:
work2much wrote:
CA Traveler wrote:
devildog1971 wrote:
(for 4K I could have put 400 watts or more on the Bigfoot)
No doubt.

As a DIY I paid $1450 for 750W in 2014 for all of the parts including UV wires, aluminum for mounting and SS screws and bolts, etc. This included a high end Morningstar MPPT 60 controller. All panels in series which provides much better shade performance than parallel panels, but that is a whole different topic.


For shaded conditions parallel is superior. In series shading one one panel affects all the panels. In parallel it only affects the shaded panel.
I should have added that serial is superior when the panels have bypass diodes. Virtually all larger panels have bypass diodes. This may not apply to some 12V panels.

My 3 serial panels (90V total) have 3 bypass diodes each. Each diode will bypass 20 cells (10 volts) of my 60 cell panels when there is a shadow on that portion of the panel. So basically I have 9 serial panel sections. When 1 section has a shadow for example the diode causes a short which is 0 volts and passes the full amps of the other 8 sections. So the result is (90V-10V) * 8A (panel Imp) or 8/9 of the panels power.

The same panels in parallel result in 1/3 power loss, hence the voltage is lower than the other 2 panels. The result is the power is 6/9 of the 3 panels vs the serial 8/9 of the 3 panels.

In the past I've posted graphs showing the effect of bypass diodes. It's easy to see the 10V steps with full amps for the given sun condition on leafy shade, hard shade and other types of shade.

From past comments I'm aware that panel bypass diodes with serial panels and shade and not well understood. But with some electrical knowledge and research what I've posted can be verified.


You are correct in that a diode will cut 20 cells or 1/3 of the panel. That panel now will be making 1/3 less amperage. Panels connected in series are limited by the production of the weakest panel so the entire string is now making 2/3 of its potential.

Let's say your 250 watt panels are 30v @ 8.33 amps each. 750 watts total at 90volts@8.33 amps.

When 20 cells are bypassed that panel is only capable of 2/3 production or 5.5 amps. The other two panels will now be restricted to 5.5 amps as well. Maximum production will be 90v at 5.5 amps or 495 watts.

In a parallel configuration you would still have one panel dropping 1/3 power through the bypass diode. 5.5 amps now instead of 8.33. The other two panels would produce their full rated amperage of 8.33 giving a total of 8.33+ 8.33 + 5.5 or 22.6 amps at 30v or 665 watts. 170 watts more.
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2020 Grand Design Solitude 2930RL 2520 watts solar. 600ah lithium. Magnum 4000 watt inverter.

GeoBoy
Explorer
Explorer
Wow, has this thread gone sideways or what? The OP resolved his problem 2 pages ago, it was a simple fuse.

work2much
Explorer
Explorer
Here is another side by side test series vs parallel. They tried 2 different panels both having bypass diodes.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1qD3mN8VotQ
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2020 Grand Design Solitude 2930RL 2520 watts solar. 600ah lithium. Magnum 4000 watt inverter.

CA_Traveler
Explorer III
Explorer III
Here's an example of leafy shade on my panels and clearly shows the 10V increments as the shade is moving off of the panels. Battery amps are going up both due to less shade and increasing brightness of the sun.

https://www.rv.net/forum/index.cfm/fuseaction/thread/tid/28956776.cfm
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2014 Grand Cherokee Overland

Bob

pianotuna
Nomad II
Nomad II
Anyone know of a panel with bypass diodes on every cell other than Uni-Solar?
Regards, Don
My ride is a 28 foot Class C, 256 watts solar, 556 amp-hours of Telcom jars, 3000 watt Magnum hybrid inverter, Sola Basic Autoformer, Microair Easy Start.

work2much
Explorer
Explorer
CA Traveler wrote:
Watched the video above and I did't see any mention of bypass diodes. Did I miss something?

Also the power drop with one cell covered in serial suggests that the 12V panels do not have bypass diodes which is not uncommon for 12V panels.


In the video description he lists the components used. The panels are 200 watt 36 cell 5 busbar Hightec brand panels with diodes.

https://www.ebay.com/itm/1-200-Watt-12-Volt-Battery-Charger-Solar-Panel-Off-Grid-RV-Boat-200-watt-total/283431535074?hash=item41fdd601e2:g:y5wAAOSwwZtacRkO

My own grape solar 180 watt panels have them. My results echo that of the test in the video. Even my old Renogy 100 watt panels had diodes. Most quality solar panels have them, even 12v panels.
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2020 Grand Design Solitude 2930RL 2520 watts solar. 600ah lithium. Magnum 4000 watt inverter.

CA_Traveler
Explorer III
Explorer III
Watched the video above and I did't see any mention of bypass diodes. Did I miss something?

Also the power drop with one cell covered in serial suggests that the 12V panels do not have bypass diodes which is not uncommon for 12V panels.
2009 Holiday Rambler 42' Scepter with ISL 400 Cummins
750 Watts Solar Morningstar MPPT 60 Controller
2014 Grand Cherokee Overland

Bob

work2much
Explorer
Explorer
Yes, I have researched bypass and blocking diodes. It was the actual testing of panels with bypass diodes that I discovered what others who have actually done shade testing have. They don't work as well as you hope they might.

Go watch the video. It was produced in a very straightforward and easy to understand way. There are other videos that show the same result.

Per has a 4500 watt array 24v 16kwh Tesla battery. This isn't someone new to solar or guessing at results with an agenda on series vs. parallel. His own array is both. The video simply shows the affects of even a small shadow on one panel where 2 are arranged in both series and in parallel. The panels he is using have bypass diodes and are about as big as you would use on a truck camper. (this is a truck camper forum) Larger higher voltage panels with more circuits and bypass diodes should be able to handle shade better but even then to claim that a series connection is better than parallel for shaded conditions does not reconcile with my own testing.
2022 Ram 3500 Laramie CTD DRW Crew 4x4 Aisin 4:10 Air ride.

2020 Grand Design Solitude 2930RL 2520 watts solar. 600ah lithium. Magnum 4000 watt inverter.