Thank you Verskstad, Rando, Grassland.
V, yes, Puekert's Law. Thank you for reminding me. d'oh! Certainly something to factor.
Rando, they are Odysseys, and I'm glad you found that chart. I had been looking elsewhere on their site. If you go to the 30- [Edit: minute] amp load line, the wattage shown is roughly the higher rating of the two appliances I wish to use.
Yes, the batts will have time to recover between hits and they'll be charging in camp with 200 watts of panels. I see at least 6 amps from each panel. I had experimented and connected the panels in series for a nominal 24V into the charge controller and saw an additional amp output, but it was an MPPT Sunsaver and this was five years ago. I am going to use a Trimetric SC2030 this time around (PWM). The 200 Ah bank needs at least 6 amps to charge it, so I could get by with one panel but charge times would be too long for anything but summer days. Too, I'll have a genset and shore charger as backup for times I'll want to bulk charge to speed the process, then let solar do the absorption phase...
Grassland, I too am rethinking how "convenient" this setup will be and will more than likely use the luxury of the inverter loads less often and brew two of the four daily cups the old-fashioned way using my Coleman 500 Speedmaster single-burner stove. There's just no getting around electric incandescent camp toast! though, so the toaster will be used at least once and then twice if DW is along on that particular trip.
Thanks again for being here and for your responses. Helps greatly to put everything into perspective. I'm still quite excited about this system, though. Imagine when on the road and you want a cup... rest stop, open the back of the trailer, touch two or three switches, pour 6 or 7 ouces of water, drop in a pod, touch another button, and bang! Fresh-brewed French roast, black. Ymmmmm.
I bought a smaller size Chemex I had never seen so I'll be using that, too, along with the 1947 Speedmaster stove.