Anyone know of some good online sources for information using solar cells? The tech department at my school is experimenting with a single module. (supposed to be about 50 watts at peak performance.)
I couldn't find the manufacturer listed on the module, but connected to a large (fire truck size) 12 volt battery, I was reading a voltage of about 9 to 9.5 volts. Open circuit voltage is about 10 volts, on a somewhat cloudy day.
I thought (and this is my big question) - isn't the voltage supposed to be roughly constant & only the current vary significantly depending on light intensity? The markings on the module:
Vmax 16.7V
Imax 3.0A
Vopen circuit 21.6V
Ishort circuit 3.35A
(someone else copied these down and thought he saw "BP", wondering when British Petroleum started manufacturing solar modules. I'm suspecting it was possibly SP (SunPower)??)
There's a voltage regulator between the module and the battery - specs say to keep the battery from over-charging & from draining too far; exactly what I expected it to do & knew should be present. But, the manual for the voltage regulator says nothing about changing the voltage; in fact, input and output voltage are supposed to be within 1/2 or 1/4 volt of each other (some fraction of a volt.)
So, how the heck is it supposed to charge the battery if the solar module output is less than 12 volts? I'm confuzzled & have very little experience with solar power but have now found myself in the position of "okay, your turn to figure this all out" - a position I generally succeed in. But, I see a quick learning curve in the next couple of days.
Still though - with a commercial voltage regulator that actually has a small pretty small voltage drop across it, it seems that the solar module should have its output vary by only 1 or 2 volts at most; just the current varying by more. With dozens of voltage readings over the past couple weeks, they haven't seen a voltage above 9.5 volts. (and charging currents - the battery is quite low - of less than a half amp.) Otherwise, the solar module would be completely useless at anything less than 12-13 volts.
Should I suspect something is wrong with the solar module?
Very little clue here.
I couldn't find the manufacturer listed on the module, but connected to a large (fire truck size) 12 volt battery, I was reading a voltage of about 9 to 9.5 volts. Open circuit voltage is about 10 volts, on a somewhat cloudy day.
I thought (and this is my big question) - isn't the voltage supposed to be roughly constant & only the current vary significantly depending on light intensity? The markings on the module:
Vmax 16.7V
Imax 3.0A
Vopen circuit 21.6V
Ishort circuit 3.35A
(someone else copied these down and thought he saw "BP", wondering when British Petroleum started manufacturing solar modules. I'm suspecting it was possibly SP (SunPower)??)
There's a voltage regulator between the module and the battery - specs say to keep the battery from over-charging & from draining too far; exactly what I expected it to do & knew should be present. But, the manual for the voltage regulator says nothing about changing the voltage; in fact, input and output voltage are supposed to be within 1/2 or 1/4 volt of each other (some fraction of a volt.)
So, how the heck is it supposed to charge the battery if the solar module output is less than 12 volts? I'm confuzzled & have very little experience with solar power but have now found myself in the position of "okay, your turn to figure this all out" - a position I generally succeed in. But, I see a quick learning curve in the next couple of days.
Still though - with a commercial voltage regulator that actually has a small pretty small voltage drop across it, it seems that the solar module should have its output vary by only 1 or 2 volts at most; just the current varying by more. With dozens of voltage readings over the past couple weeks, they haven't seen a voltage above 9.5 volts. (and charging currents - the battery is quite low - of less than a half amp.) Otherwise, the solar module would be completely useless at anything less than 12-13 volts.
Should I suspect something is wrong with the solar module?
Very little clue here.
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