2014 S Maxx
2011 Tacoma 4cyl ... edit: 2022 Tacoma 6cyl - oh yeah!

A_Little_T@b'll_Do_Ya
2021 T@b 320 Boondock "Mattie Ross" | 2021 T@b Nights: 239 | Total nights in a T@b 455 | 2022 Jeep Grand Cherokee L Overland | T@b owner since 2014

DougH said:I saw on YouTube tonight that Slim Potatohead is planning an experiment with a $150 400W micro turbine wind generator to complement the solar on his Aliner. Will be interesting to see if he runs them in series into a 1000-1200W MPPT controller, a hybrid wind/solar controller, or two MPPTs. Intruiging idea.


No loss? There is always loss when you convert.DigitalSorceress said:Because 24v at 5 amps converts back to 12v at 10 amps in the mppt at no loss.. you generate at 24 v and benefit from low amps on the long wire from the pannel to the controller.. then the mppt gives you back 12v at the original amps.. no electricity is lost or destroyed save the resistence from the wire.. resistence which is less for lower current higher voltage
I need to run my panels 40' from my camper at one event.. I'm putting the panels in series so that they'll be OK with 10 AWG .. less loss that way.. The benefits of higher voltage over a run that long outweigh the miniscule penalty for the MPPT controller converting back to 12v..ColoradoJon said:No loss? There is always loss when you convert.DigitalSorceress said:Because 24v at 5 amps converts back to 12v at 10 amps in the mppt at no loss.. you generate at 24 v and benefit from low amps on the long wire from the pannel to the controller.. then the mppt gives you back 12v at the original amps.. no electricity is lost or destroyed save the resistence from the wire.. resistence which is less for lower current higher voltage
I guess the problem I have with this is that our RV systems are so small that the amount of efficiency that we are talking about here is so small that I'm not even sure that it is a problem. Put the charge controller close to the batteries if voltage loss is a concern. The distance from the panel to the controller is less of an issue.
Anyway, I digress. Interesting discussion for sure! I'll need to keep this in mind when we install our home solar setup next year


DigitalSorceress said:
2x 100 WATT solar panels
PARALLEL
200w = I*12v 16.666A
40' 10 AWG
Voltage drop: 0.80
Voltage drop percentage: 6.66%
Voltage at the end: 11.2
SERIES
200w = I*24v 8.3333A
40' 10 AWG
Voltage drop: 0.80
Voltage drop percentage: 3.33%Voltage at the end: 23.2So by simply putting my panels in series instead of parallel I halve the voltage drop..

)@DigitalSorceress said:I need to run my panels 40' from my camper at one event.. I'm putting the panels in series so that they'll be OK with 10 AWG .. less loss that way.. The benefits of higher voltage over a run that long outweigh the miniscule penalty for the MPPT controller converting back to 12v..
2x 100 WATT solar panels
PARALLEL
200w = I*12v 16.666A
40' 10 AWG
Voltage drop: 0.80
Voltage drop percentage: 6.66%
Voltage at the end: 11.2
SERIES
200w = I*24v 8.3333A
40' 10 AWG
Voltage drop: 0.80
Voltage drop percentage: 3.33%Voltage at the end: 23.2So by simply putting my panels in series instead of parallel I halve the voltage drop..To me, that's a win.. if I want to have 12v run that length with the same drop I need to use 7 AWG (https://www.calculator.net/voltage-drop-calculator.html) but since nobody carries 7, we'd need to go with 6 AWG wire
Lowes:
10AWG is 50 cents a foot:2 wires = 80' ($40 for the wire)6 AWG is 93 cents a foot:2 wires = 80' ($74 for the wire)SO to have the same electrical carrying capacity/loss I need to spend $34 more on wire alone .. or run series instead of parallel
and 6 gauge wire is way heavier and bulkier to deal with ..
