First experience with solar - mixed results...
Updating this: Got the basic Renogy kit with the MPPT 20a controller and the single 100w panel. Thought I'd share my experiences and results from the first camping trip using the solar panel.
We camped at a lake in the Colorado Mountains that has no power of any kind (Wellington Lake near Bailey for those who are familiar with the area, near Buffalo Creek.) We were on the West side of the lake, where there is a small peninsula that juts out towards the East.
I should probably preface this by saying that we camped at the same spot last year with the same trailer and the same fridge (Indel B TB-41.) The difference was that last year we kept the fridge in my 4runner running off the 4runner's battery. We would be there for 4 days/3 nights and my thought then was that I would start the 4runner and run it for about a half hour/45 minutes twice a day, basically at breakfast and dinner, in order to keep the battery charged (I did not have a volt meter with me and didn't check the battery.) On the last day, Sunday, I figured that since we would be leaving by 11:00 in the morning, there was no need to start the truck as I would be starting it when we left. This was a mistake because by 10:30 or so when we left, the battery had gotten discharged enough that it needed to be jump started. It was then that I started thinking I need to get some kind of solar setup.
This year, after doing a lot of research I realized that it didn't make sense to try and run the fridge off of my 55ah starter battery in the truck when the camper (2014 T@B Clamshell) has a bigger battery anyway (75ah SLA.) So instead of leaving the fridge in the truck we put it in the trailer and plugged it in to the 12v outlet there.
As I said in the title, the results were "mixed" but a lot of that has to be attributed to the location and the weather. Last year we camped on the same peninsula but we camped on the South side, which would have given us maximum sun exposure for the panels. This year, though, the wife wanted to camp on the shadier North side. This presented a challenge for solar use as the area is forested, and it meant that I was constantly moving the panel in order to keep it in the sun. The weather also played a factor - we had a "monsoonal flow" this past weekend that meant afternoons normally saw cloudy skies and intermittent rain, obviously diminishing the amount of power going to the panels.
However, our setup
worked. The fridge stayed cold and only shut down once due to low voltage. It was pure luck that it happened just as I stepped into the trailer to check the fridge, the temperature display flipped from 32 to "E1" which is the code for a low-voltage shutdown. Immediately I checked the voltage cutoff switch (the Indel-b has a 3 position voltage cutoff switch) and set it from "medium" to "low" and the fridge came back on. Then I moved the solar panel into more direct sunlight. That was on Friday and the fridge worked fine until we left on Sunday morning.
Before I set up camp I checked the battery and it measured 12.65v, so basically a fully charged SLA. When we left on Sunday morning, it was down to about 11.79 - obviously not good. If that had been a starter battery it would definitely have needed a jump start. But since it wasn't a starter battery, no problem and I'm hoping that being a "deep cycle" Marine/RV battery it is not the kind to be damaged by discharging to that point (though I don't want to make a habit of it.) If I seem cavalier about the condition of the battery it's because I intend to replace it, most likely with a pair of 6v batteries wired in series - this should give me maximum AH (our friends who have an identical trailer have done this, in fact I got to check out their setup this weekend and it's pretty nice. They have 208ah total!)
So my lessons learned from this are: Site location is paramount if you're camping in a forested area. Moving the panel was a total PITA and I don't want to have to do that again. Fortunately our next campout without power is at Beecher Island in Eastern Colorado near the Kansas state line (if you've ever been to the Colorado/Kansas state line you'll understand that "too many trees" is not a problem they have out there.

)
Second lesson: I bought the basic 100w fixed panel and I should have gotten the folding panel made for traveling. While the panel I have works, it's huge, takes up a lot of space and there's not really a good way to carry it (I just put it back into the shipping box for transportation.) When we go to Beecher Island we won't have the Kayaks so I may be able to put the panel on the roof of my Suburban but I'd still like to have a decent case to transport it in.
The stiff 8AWG wire was not fun to deal with and I will probably have to come up with a way to replace that before September.
Anyway, I wanted to share my experiences with anyone else who may be considering a solar setup for remote camping. :elkgrin: