Potential voltage is what I was talking.
On the panel side I don't really see how the voltage can really lower at the times current flows assuming all cells have sun on them. The panel is going to put out 17V regardless, when anything creates a draw. That is where the PWM going on/off creates a lowered effective voltage after the controller but the incoming feed is going to be something like 17V (minus losses) on/off/on/off/on/off rather than the voltage from the panel being pulled down.
The voltage of the PV will be whatever the battery voltage is - not the rated Vmp of 17v (or whatever) because when the PV is connected to the battery, it becomes part of the charging loop. So now the loop isn't battery-wire-controller, it's battery-wire-controller-wire-PV. And the voltage of the charging loop is controlled by the battery. (With a non-MPPT controller. With an MPPT controller, there are two separate loops or circuts.)
Once the battery voltage has risen to the set point, then the PWM regulates the max voltage of the circuit by cutting out (reducing the duty cycle). Otherwise, the PV which has a [whatever, say 17v] potential will keep pushing the voltage of the charging circuit up, which will overcharge the battery. But until the battery gets to the set point, IT (the battery) is regulating the voltage of the loop.
Because it's all one big loop (circuit), it doesn't matter, with a non-MPPT controller, where in the loop the controller is (to return to an earlier question). With an MPPT controller, then yea - it matters; put the charge controller as close to the battery as possible to minimize the charging time delay (pointed out by 4x4J) that results from voltage drop.
Also, with MPPT, since the *amperage* on the charge circuit will (usually) be higher than the amperage on the PV side, but the voltage on the charge side will be lower than the voltage on the supply side - then you generally need larger wire between the battery-controller than you need between the controller-PV. With a non-MPPT controller, you can use the same size wire on both sides. Having larger wire on the battery side doesn't gain you anything unless you use larger wire on the other side of the controller as well.
Here's an article that explains:
http://www.blueskyenergyinc.com/uploads/pdf/Practical_Sailor.pdf
"A typical 80-watt panel has an
operating voltage of 17.8 volts that
delivers 4.5 amps (watts = volts x
amps)
in industry standard conditions.
This is the Maximum Power
Point (MPP) for this panel.
However,
when the solar panel is connected
to a battery bank—either through
a regulator or directly—the panel’s
operating voltage is pulled down to
something near the voltage of the
battery bank,
yet the charging current—
4.5 amps—remains the same.
Under these conditions, 60 watts
(12.2 volts x 4.5 amps)
[Or...whatever the battery voltage happens to be, times whatever the current happens to be - he's just using those numbers as an example. - dwh]
is the maximum
charging power the batteries
will ever receive from the 80-watt
solar panel. If the battery voltage is
lower, even less power will be available
to charge the battery bank."
That's what happens with a non-MPPT controller. The next paragraph explains what the MPPT does:
"A Maximum Power Point Tracking
regulator finds and tracks the
MPP for the prevailing conditions,
which in turn determines
the best
operating voltage for the panel.
Then,
while the optimum panel voltage is
maintained, a voltage converter lowers
the output voltage before sending
it on to the batteries.
The charging
voltage, after conversion, would vary
with battery condition, but for our
purposes we’ll use 12.6 volts."