This is just a theoretical...
By reading through countless threads on the forum here, I've learned (among many other things) that solar panels are current sources, not voltage sources, and thus it's more of the available current that changes based on environmental conditions, not the voltage that changes (eg. more sun == more current, less sun == less current; voltage staying about the same.)
What I'm curious about is -- instead of using a charge controller (off-grid/hybrid) or inverter (grid-tied), could you theoretically use a generic DC buck-boost converter? I know that it wouldn't be a guaranteed output, and that it wouldn't allow the panels to operate even remotely efficiently, but I'm just curious -- if I were to have a small solar panel, and a buck-boost converter that could handle the maximum voltage and current that the panel can output (with a margin for cold days, etc.) (something like this :: https://www.amazon.com/DROK-Adjustab.../dp/B00C9UAE28 ) could I theoretically run a voltage-dependent load off of the panel, without needing a battery, charge controller, or inverter?
)
My brain tells me that this would theoretically work. But I know that I don't know all that much in reality, so I wanted to ask folks that know a whole lot more than I do
By reading through countless threads on the forum here, I've learned (among many other things) that solar panels are current sources, not voltage sources, and thus it's more of the available current that changes based on environmental conditions, not the voltage that changes (eg. more sun == more current, less sun == less current; voltage staying about the same.)
What I'm curious about is -- instead of using a charge controller (off-grid/hybrid) or inverter (grid-tied), could you theoretically use a generic DC buck-boost converter? I know that it wouldn't be a guaranteed output, and that it wouldn't allow the panels to operate even remotely efficiently, but I'm just curious -- if I were to have a small solar panel, and a buck-boost converter that could handle the maximum voltage and current that the panel can output (with a margin for cold days, etc.) (something like this :: https://www.amazon.com/DROK-Adjustab.../dp/B00C9UAE28 ) could I theoretically run a voltage-dependent load off of the panel, without needing a battery, charge controller, or inverter?
)
My brain tells me that this would theoretically work. But I know that I don't know all that much in reality, so I wanted to ask folks that know a whole lot more than I do

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