Hi all,
I have read that most modern charge controllers have an internal blocking diode that prevents current flowing the other way at night when the pane is in an off (no power state). Does this still apply when both the input from the solar panel and government power supply are being used simultaneously to charge the batteries (government power supply is erratic where I live)?
The terminal from the charge controller and from the inverter converge at the battery heads, and during daylight and when there is the said alternate power supply they can both charge the batteries. My solar panel system is as simple as this image Solar sys.jpg, with no diodes, fuses etc.
My problem is that after working the first day (there was no external/government power supply), on the second day there was also the external power supply the charge light on the controller was blinking as if there was an issue (it is a basic one with no display just LED to indicate charging load and batteries). After about 30 mins the controller started to smoke out and had to be disconnected, which is why I came to the conclusion that the problem was from an absent blocking diode, that can block any spill over voltage from the inverter.
Any thoughts on this please?
I have read that most modern charge controllers have an internal blocking diode that prevents current flowing the other way at night when the pane is in an off (no power state). Does this still apply when both the input from the solar panel and government power supply are being used simultaneously to charge the batteries (government power supply is erratic where I live)?
The terminal from the charge controller and from the inverter converge at the battery heads, and during daylight and when there is the said alternate power supply they can both charge the batteries. My solar panel system is as simple as this image Solar sys.jpg, with no diodes, fuses etc.
My problem is that after working the first day (there was no external/government power supply), on the second day there was also the external power supply the charge light on the controller was blinking as if there was an issue (it is a basic one with no display just LED to indicate charging load and batteries). After about 30 mins the controller started to smoke out and had to be disconnected, which is why I came to the conclusion that the problem was from an absent blocking diode, that can block any spill over voltage from the inverter.
Any thoughts on this please?
Comment