I like the idea of parking in the shade and tossing the panels out in the sun. No issues with drilling holes and sealing the roof of the camper as a bonus. The downside I suppose is that they would not be recharging your batteries while underway but the vehicle's alternator could do that just the same.
Hi Ian,
Yes I have a 100w thin panel that is attached to the top of a hard shell roof top tent. My panel is semi flexible aluminium backing and 2.5mm thick, I have it attached to the fiberglass top with silicone sealer and small stainless screws. From the website you posted, it looks to be the same brand as you are looking at (but I do see that ebay sellers often "borrow" photographs ).
I spend a lot of time off road and travelling in quite harsh terrain, it has proven to be very robust, except that you can scratch the plastic film with tree branches in the bush. Real light weight at only about 2.5 kg compared to the 14kg pannels that I previously had on my roof rack for the same wattage.
I will post a few photos when I am home again.
I have just put a deposit on a new James Baroud hard shell roof top camper so I am now looking to get some new thinner panels with EVA plastic backing for my new rooftop tent project. The main difference that I want is to not have a junction box on top of the panel, I want the cable out the back so it is completely flat. Unfortunately it seems hard to find pannels that have no junction box on top and some of them are extremely expensive for top end offshore yachating applications.
Hi. I have same panels as Ian. I note you screwed through your aluminium panels. Is that ok? I asked my ebay seller if I could and he informed me not to do that. I really need to drill some small holes along the edges to screw down and am worried about doing that, so if you have done it without any problems please let me know. Cheers George
I have 4x85W rigid panels on the roof at an angle, and another 85W and a big 300W panel mounted on the roof flat, but it can be taken off and put in the sun so we can park in the shade.
I took a lot of time sorting out the protection bars for the fixed panels, so that they don't form any shadows. I tested the85W panels and just a shadow on the corner means the output drops a huge amount.
![]()
I used the overhead light to look for shadows.
![]()
I would be wary rigid panels on the roof without some means of protecting them, one tree could really do a lot of damage.
The removable panels are not on yet, but the are bolted to the tropical roof but with brackets that are easily removed.
There is a 12mm gap under the edges of the panel for airflow, and the top edge has a 25mm gap due to the angle. I was planning on drilling holes in the top side to increase air flow, but will wait and see if the heat really is a problem