pandos
Well-Known Member
I have a 100w solar panel. It was linked to a Vectron PWM controller. Feeding my old AGM batteries.
The PWM provided some charge on occasions. It turned out that the panel was faulty, the connections had not been soldered. Following repairs I got fairly consistent charging although not very much of it. about 3amps.
I have a NASA BM and this seems to reflect the state of charge of the batteries. When I start the engine I get about 15 amps in...when just a few lights and the radio is on it shows just a few amps going out I think it is accurate, and it tally's with my multimeters in terms of the battery voltage.
I fitted new AGM batteries last winter. And was getting some charge from the PWM.
A few weeks ago I fitted a new MPPT charger. (I did not go for the one with the built in Blue tooth).
Over the weeks it has shown almost no charge, in fact my instinct is that it is taking charge out of the system. When I fitted it the green led flashed and the yellow led remained constant. This seemingly indicates battery activity and that the system is at float.
Yesterday I investigated, I ran new cables from the panel. To the MPPT. The controller is only about a foot from the batteries and the cables are all visible. There was no change in the LEDs.
I measured the voltage across the panel connections at the controller it was something about 20.5v maybe a little more but it seemed satisfactory.
Across the battery connections on the MPPT it showed 13.7v but at the batteries themselves (about 18 inches of stout cable away) the voltage is 12.5v. how can this be?
It seems that the MPPT is not putting out much charge because it senses the batteries as being at 13.7v. even though they are much lower than this.
Is this a quirk of these systems trying to be too clever which might resolve after a period of darkness, when there will be no source of voltage above 12.5v,?
Or is it likely to be a faulty controller.?
My instinct is that if I had the Bluetooth gizmo which plugs into it I would tell it to bulk charge until 14.4v and see if it came to life...but I'd rather pay for a second panel than add further complications to the system.
BTW I do not have a jumper in the connection, (I lost it?) but I think with no jumper it should still work.
The PWM provided some charge on occasions. It turned out that the panel was faulty, the connections had not been soldered. Following repairs I got fairly consistent charging although not very much of it. about 3amps.
I have a NASA BM and this seems to reflect the state of charge of the batteries. When I start the engine I get about 15 amps in...when just a few lights and the radio is on it shows just a few amps going out I think it is accurate, and it tally's with my multimeters in terms of the battery voltage.
I fitted new AGM batteries last winter. And was getting some charge from the PWM.
A few weeks ago I fitted a new MPPT charger. (I did not go for the one with the built in Blue tooth).
Over the weeks it has shown almost no charge, in fact my instinct is that it is taking charge out of the system. When I fitted it the green led flashed and the yellow led remained constant. This seemingly indicates battery activity and that the system is at float.
Yesterday I investigated, I ran new cables from the panel. To the MPPT. The controller is only about a foot from the batteries and the cables are all visible. There was no change in the LEDs.
I measured the voltage across the panel connections at the controller it was something about 20.5v maybe a little more but it seemed satisfactory.
Across the battery connections on the MPPT it showed 13.7v but at the batteries themselves (about 18 inches of stout cable away) the voltage is 12.5v. how can this be?
It seems that the MPPT is not putting out much charge because it senses the batteries as being at 13.7v. even though they are much lower than this.
Is this a quirk of these systems trying to be too clever which might resolve after a period of darkness, when there will be no source of voltage above 12.5v,?
Or is it likely to be a faulty controller.?
My instinct is that if I had the Bluetooth gizmo which plugs into it I would tell it to bulk charge until 14.4v and see if it came to life...but I'd rather pay for a second panel than add further complications to the system.
BTW I do not have a jumper in the connection, (I lost it?) but I think with no jumper it should still work.