PaulRainbow
Well-Known Member
Where are the Victron dual battery mppt controllers![]()
They don't exist.
Yes there are.
Goggle will find them
Could we have some links please ?
Where are the Victron dual battery mppt controllers![]()
They don't exist.
Yes there are.
Goggle will find them
My boat stays in all year and I control my 2x80w solar with a [h=2]20A DUAL BATTERY SOLAR CHARGE CONTROLLER / REGULATOR FOR 12V / 24V BATTERIES[/h]Works well, it took me a couple of weeks whilst cruising last summer to realise that my 12v alternator had failed!OK, so if there's no such thing as a dual output MPPT controller, and my boat gets left in the water, all on its lonesome all winter
My boat stays in all year and I control my 2x80w solar with a [h=2]20A DUAL BATTERY SOLAR CHARGE CONTROLLER / REGULATOR FOR 12V / 24V BATTERIES[/h]Works well, it took me a couple of weeks whilst cruising last summer to realise that my 12v alternator had failed!
Thanks. Is it an MPPT controller? If so, what make and model?
My boat stays in all year and I control my 2x80w solar with a [h=2]20A DUAL BATTERY SOLAR CHARGE CONTROLLER / REGULATOR FOR 12V / 24V BATTERIES[/h]Works well, it took me a couple of weeks whilst cruising last summer to realise that my 12v alternator had failed!
I guess if we had the space to add another panel, we'd be the same, our 100w output (which we never get lol) just doesn't quite 'hack it'. So I'm hoping the little extra supplied from MPPT will make the difference. I could of course, just buy a newer fridge and heave our old one over the side. Hey, then I could dive on it to see how it's holdingI use a PWM dual output controller with 125 watts of solar. I am perfectly happy with it after many years of use. An MPPT might possibly give some small advantage but my batteries cope well with all my loads including fridge 24/ in ambient temperatures in the 30s.
These are the MPPT variants http://www.photonicuniverse.com/en/catalog/list/category/DBMPPTcontrollers
These are the MPPT variants http://www.photonicuniverse.com/en/catalog/list/category/DBMPPTcontrollers
But they are not dual MPPT controllers. They are single output MPPT with a trickle charge for the engine battery. It is not technically possible to simultaneously charge two separate banks with a single controller using MPPT. The controller can't match MPPT to both banks at the same time, as they will have differing SOC.
Why do you suppose the like of Victron don't make a dual MPPT controller ?
But they only trickle charge, max 1 amp, the second battery
Correct. But if the OP wishes to charge his leisure batteries and maintain his engine start battery, the device mentioned will work very well for him.... with his dreaded 1-2-b-o switch and will not require fitment of a VSR in that case for his solar to charge both banks.
That's incorrect.But they are not dual MPPT controllers. They are single output MPPT with a trickle charge for the engine battery. It is not technically possible to simultaneously charge two separate banks with a single controller using MPPT. The controller can't match MPPT to both banks at the same time, as they will have differing SOC.
Why do you suppose the like of Victron don't make a dual MPPT controller ?
That's incorrect.
MPPT is a method of extracting maximum power from a solar panel. (or other power source of variable impedance)
It is perfectly possible to take that power and regulate two outputs from it.
But with a limited amout of power available, you have to prioritise one output, or decide what you want to happen when there's insufficient sunlight to put as much charge as you'd like into both banks.
No it isn't
The controller is designed to get the most current into the batteries. It senses the voltage at the batteries to be able to apply the best voltage for the batteries. It is, in essence, a DC-DC converter, it cannot apply different charging voltages to two banks at the same time.
Surely the whole point of a MPPT controller is to do what its name suggests. To control the current drawn from the solar panel so that it operates at its maximum power output point
Of course it is, that's how it gets the most current into the batteries. The MPPT is based on the output of the panels and the load to which the current is going (the batteries in our case). So it obviously needs to monitor the panel voltage and the battery voltage. It's easy enough to monitor the voltage of two battery banks, but how does the controller decide which one to use when calculating the MPPT ?