Hi,
I know the question about putting charge controllers in parallel has been asked and answered a lot, but the threads I have found all talk about doing it for charging only and any diagrams I have seen show only one pair of load terminals connected. I am interested in also connecting together the load terminals to increase maximum output current for my load.
First of all, I am on a budget so going out and buying a big fancy charge controller may be an obvious answer, but I am hoping for a more cost efficient method. (I am also hoping to just add in more controllers as I get more panels, which will be over a long period of time)
I currently have a couple of 12v batteries. (2 brand new 120Ah deep cycle, received today)
I have a single 200W 24v panel and hopefully will soon be getting a 250W 24v panel to go with it.
I have a cheap charge controller. (its called SOLAR30, ebay special)
I recently got my hands on an 800w 12v inverter.
My charge controller has a maximum rating of 30Amps.
My load that I want to run occasionally is 500watts. I make that approximately 42 Amps.
My general load the rest of the time (maybe an hour or two per day) varies between about 20w and 80w. (about 1.5A to 6.5A)
What I was hoping to do is get another identical (well, same brand/model) 30A charge controller and run it in parallel with the other. (except for the panel connection)
My batteries are in parallel, so running at 12v.
From what I have read, I have a pretty decent chance of being able to attach a single panel to each controller and connect the batteries to both controllers at the same time by simply connecting the positive terminals together and negative terminals together. (Actually, trying to make the cable length from each controller to battery as close as possible, not simply daisy chaining them, to minimize voltage difference the two controllers see.) I understand that the controllers will probably come on/off at slightly different times and there is a chance that one may make the other think the battery is charged so it doesn't activate. For that side of things I will just try it and see. From what I have read it sounds like a lot of people have had a fair amount of success with that configuration.
My question is can I do with the load side what I plan to do with the batteries? Connect together the two positive terminals and then the two negative terminals and attach my 42A load? Is this something that can work or will the whole thing just blow up in my face? I am hoping that both controllers will simply share the load and allow me to run maybe 50A for a short period if I needed to.
I do understand that at 50A my batteries are gonna be reaching 50% in around 2 hours. I only want to use this load for maybe 30 minutes and probably only once a week. (maybe twice) I also hope to add more panels and more batteries later. (and possibly a 3rd controller)
Can anyone share any experience with this?
I only recently bought the inverter, which is rated at 12v only.
My controllers are rated 12v/24v. In hindsight I would obviously have connected the batteries in series to run at 24v and get a 24v invertor, cutting my current demand in half. Isn't hindsight a wonderful thing. :/
Unfortunately, I purchased the invertor a few weeks ago when I was running on a single dying 12v car battery. I since replaced that with 2 new ones.
I very much appreciate the time anyone spends trying to help me out.
I know the question about putting charge controllers in parallel has been asked and answered a lot, but the threads I have found all talk about doing it for charging only and any diagrams I have seen show only one pair of load terminals connected. I am interested in also connecting together the load terminals to increase maximum output current for my load.
First of all, I am on a budget so going out and buying a big fancy charge controller may be an obvious answer, but I am hoping for a more cost efficient method. (I am also hoping to just add in more controllers as I get more panels, which will be over a long period of time)
I currently have a couple of 12v batteries. (2 brand new 120Ah deep cycle, received today)
I have a single 200W 24v panel and hopefully will soon be getting a 250W 24v panel to go with it.
I have a cheap charge controller. (its called SOLAR30, ebay special)
I recently got my hands on an 800w 12v inverter.
My charge controller has a maximum rating of 30Amps.
My load that I want to run occasionally is 500watts. I make that approximately 42 Amps.
My general load the rest of the time (maybe an hour or two per day) varies between about 20w and 80w. (about 1.5A to 6.5A)
What I was hoping to do is get another identical (well, same brand/model) 30A charge controller and run it in parallel with the other. (except for the panel connection)
My batteries are in parallel, so running at 12v.
From what I have read, I have a pretty decent chance of being able to attach a single panel to each controller and connect the batteries to both controllers at the same time by simply connecting the positive terminals together and negative terminals together. (Actually, trying to make the cable length from each controller to battery as close as possible, not simply daisy chaining them, to minimize voltage difference the two controllers see.) I understand that the controllers will probably come on/off at slightly different times and there is a chance that one may make the other think the battery is charged so it doesn't activate. For that side of things I will just try it and see. From what I have read it sounds like a lot of people have had a fair amount of success with that configuration.
My question is can I do with the load side what I plan to do with the batteries? Connect together the two positive terminals and then the two negative terminals and attach my 42A load? Is this something that can work or will the whole thing just blow up in my face? I am hoping that both controllers will simply share the load and allow me to run maybe 50A for a short period if I needed to.
I do understand that at 50A my batteries are gonna be reaching 50% in around 2 hours. I only want to use this load for maybe 30 minutes and probably only once a week. (maybe twice) I also hope to add more panels and more batteries later. (and possibly a 3rd controller)
Can anyone share any experience with this?
I only recently bought the inverter, which is rated at 12v only.
My controllers are rated 12v/24v. In hindsight I would obviously have connected the batteries in series to run at 24v and get a 24v invertor, cutting my current demand in half. Isn't hindsight a wonderful thing. :/
Unfortunately, I purchased the invertor a few weeks ago when I was running on a single dying 12v car battery. I since replaced that with 2 new ones.
I very much appreciate the time anyone spends trying to help me out.
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