I have a single 50w mono 12v panel that is used to charge a 35ah battery in the back of my van off a Renogy 12/24v 30A PWM controller. The system's sole function is to run a really small fridge and small lighting system.
Anyway, I know that PWM controllers are unable to provide the full power output of the solar panel, unlike MPPT, because voltage above 14.4v is basically lost energy. I am questioning the accuracy of that statement though, and here is why.
I did some testing. In full sun at high noon with the panel pointed directly to the sun, the maximum output I could achieve from the panel as measured with a multimeter was 3.01A @ 12.4v which is about 37W. This was when the panel was connected to the battery and the battery was over 50% depleted, so the battery would accept as much current as the panel would throw at it. However, and here is the catch, the voltage output of the panel was not ~18v as the sticker on the back would suggest, rather it was the same voltage as the battery, 12.4. This tells me that the PWM solar controller simply runs the solar panel and battery in parallel with no PWM modulation until the voltage of the battery reaches the PWM activation voltage of the controller, which in my case I have it set to 13.8v. I did some testing at other voltages ranging from a completely dead battery, 10.5v, up to fully charged at 14.0v. In all cases, as long as the battery voltage is below about 13.0v, the controller simply parallels the solar panel with the battery.
In other words, if the battery is not fully charged, the solar controller is basically invisible, it's effectively the exact same as if I just hooked the solar panel straight to the battery with no controller at all. So if the PWM controller does NOT use any PWM at voltages below the float voltage set point (13.8v), and it just runs the panel in parallel with the battery, the whole "PWM controllers cant capture excess voltage" shouldent apply, because there is no excess voltage to capture. Thus, why dont I get the full 50W from the panel?
For fun, I actually tried connecting the panel straight to the battery with no PWM controller at all with the battery 50% depleted, and I got the same results, max current was about 3.04A @ 12.4v (38W or so) in full sun, high noon, bright day, pointed perfectly at the sun.
My cable losses are minimal. I measured a voltage drop of only 0.07v @3A across the entire cable network. I measured from the solar panel terminals to the battery terminals.
Anyway, I know that PWM controllers are unable to provide the full power output of the solar panel, unlike MPPT, because voltage above 14.4v is basically lost energy. I am questioning the accuracy of that statement though, and here is why.
I did some testing. In full sun at high noon with the panel pointed directly to the sun, the maximum output I could achieve from the panel as measured with a multimeter was 3.01A @ 12.4v which is about 37W. This was when the panel was connected to the battery and the battery was over 50% depleted, so the battery would accept as much current as the panel would throw at it. However, and here is the catch, the voltage output of the panel was not ~18v as the sticker on the back would suggest, rather it was the same voltage as the battery, 12.4. This tells me that the PWM solar controller simply runs the solar panel and battery in parallel with no PWM modulation until the voltage of the battery reaches the PWM activation voltage of the controller, which in my case I have it set to 13.8v. I did some testing at other voltages ranging from a completely dead battery, 10.5v, up to fully charged at 14.0v. In all cases, as long as the battery voltage is below about 13.0v, the controller simply parallels the solar panel with the battery.
In other words, if the battery is not fully charged, the solar controller is basically invisible, it's effectively the exact same as if I just hooked the solar panel straight to the battery with no controller at all. So if the PWM controller does NOT use any PWM at voltages below the float voltage set point (13.8v), and it just runs the panel in parallel with the battery, the whole "PWM controllers cant capture excess voltage" shouldent apply, because there is no excess voltage to capture. Thus, why dont I get the full 50W from the panel?
For fun, I actually tried connecting the panel straight to the battery with no PWM controller at all with the battery 50% depleted, and I got the same results, max current was about 3.04A @ 12.4v (38W or so) in full sun, high noon, bright day, pointed perfectly at the sun.
My cable losses are minimal. I measured a voltage drop of only 0.07v @3A across the entire cable network. I measured from the solar panel terminals to the battery terminals.
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