WagoneerSX4
Adventurer
I've been reading up on them for a few days now since I'm thinking about investing in a 40watt panel to charge my car battery on camping trips. Basically I just want to be able to run my aux lights at night with the engine off and not have to worry about not being to start the car whenever we start off in the morning (of course if there's enough usable light in the morning while we're having breakfast/packing up the campsite). I realize it won't fully charge in this time period, but I'm not planning on completely depleting the battery at night. Though I would like to be able to run my 12v cooler constantly day and night.
So my first question, can you hook up a panel to charge your battery while there's load on the battery? During the day, it will just be my cooler, that's it. I'm going to assume that any load on the battery will probably be more than what the panel can produce so overcharging will never occur? The panel would charge at 3.3amps, in clear sunlight (40w panel). Is a solar charger regulator absolutely needed or is that just basically for keeping battery topped off for long periods of time?
Speaking of overcharging, these new panels run at 42-44V so that they can work in low-light conditions, so in a normal day of full sunlight, can they overcharge a battery to the point of damaging it or will that take days and days of trickle charging? My math says no, but I'm still curious. Do I need a 40w panel for my needs, or will a much more compact 18w panel be enough?
And lastly, are they worth it to lug around every camping trip and do they work well enough? Space is always an issue with my rig, so if it's not actually worth bringing along, I'm not going to bring it. Is bringing along an emergency booster pack just a more fail-safe alternative to a solar panel charger?
I'm sure I know the answers to these questions already, I'm just getting confused by trying to weed out all the bad info floating around out there about solar panels.
So my first question, can you hook up a panel to charge your battery while there's load on the battery? During the day, it will just be my cooler, that's it. I'm going to assume that any load on the battery will probably be more than what the panel can produce so overcharging will never occur? The panel would charge at 3.3amps, in clear sunlight (40w panel). Is a solar charger regulator absolutely needed or is that just basically for keeping battery topped off for long periods of time?
Speaking of overcharging, these new panels run at 42-44V so that they can work in low-light conditions, so in a normal day of full sunlight, can they overcharge a battery to the point of damaging it or will that take days and days of trickle charging? My math says no, but I'm still curious. Do I need a 40w panel for my needs, or will a much more compact 18w panel be enough?
And lastly, are they worth it to lug around every camping trip and do they work well enough? Space is always an issue with my rig, so if it's not actually worth bringing along, I'm not going to bring it. Is bringing along an emergency booster pack just a more fail-safe alternative to a solar panel charger?
I'm sure I know the answers to these questions already, I'm just getting confused by trying to weed out all the bad info floating around out there about solar panels.