Hi there, I have my own solar panel setup, in fact 3 of them. Have read lots of information, pages, forums, watched videos, etc. I'm still confused. This is the sort of question you can find lots of EASY answers, but depends on who you ask. The thing is this is easy to replicate, stay with me please.
As I read I kept finding information that built conclusions over power and efficiency, I couldn't help to find lots of other people also confused about this. Turns out despite how contradicting this sounds to me, my 120W panel can't power a 60W laptop. Let's expand this in several different ways. The solar panel is located at full sun power, no problem, connected to a charge controller, a battery and one inverter. Yes I can power my laptop but not constantly. The energy goes to the battery and then to the inverter, then to the laptop, it's not enough so the battery will drain until discharged. I know energy is wasted in the process: charging is not perfect, the inverter also wastes energy, there is nothing 100% efficient without power loss, I get it, I understand this.
But in no way I can imagine 60W being lost in that process (60W used and 60W wasted). Yes I have measured everything.
Ready? ok, there are forums, pages and videos explaining solar panels and how to produce energy, perfect, easy, but very few approach the topic of WHAT CAN YOU POWER WITH IT. Yes you can find information about 100w panel = you can power 90w electronics!!! well that's not true apparently. There are videos from professionals trying to explain this and they are long, boring, complex, and actually not clear. This sort of thing confused me until I found some sources being clear and straight to the point, saying "100W panel can't power 90W electronics, not even 80, it doesn't work that way". Some explain how the panels produce X watts (voltage x amperage) but those measurements are valid only without a load, and the moment you plug something directly you see the drop, meaning a 100W solar panel can't really power something near 100W.
I keep reading and I still find confusing sources of information, and most of it: a lot of people making questions, no real answers. It's not like a powerbank for your cellphone: 5V 1A, you can power your phone for about X hours, no way, in solar panels it's about "plug and test". The information on how to calculate the size of your system are kinda confusing to me, and most of them rely on big battery banks, I get it, but doesn't solve the relation between solar power output vs consumption, the numbers seen odd to me.
As much as I dislike the conclusion I keep finding evidence that if I have a 60W laptop, I won't be able to power it with a 100W solar panel, even at full sunlight. I keep finding contradicting information anyway.
Anyone care to expand in human terms? thanks in advance.
As I read I kept finding information that built conclusions over power and efficiency, I couldn't help to find lots of other people also confused about this. Turns out despite how contradicting this sounds to me, my 120W panel can't power a 60W laptop. Let's expand this in several different ways. The solar panel is located at full sun power, no problem, connected to a charge controller, a battery and one inverter. Yes I can power my laptop but not constantly. The energy goes to the battery and then to the inverter, then to the laptop, it's not enough so the battery will drain until discharged. I know energy is wasted in the process: charging is not perfect, the inverter also wastes energy, there is nothing 100% efficient without power loss, I get it, I understand this.
But in no way I can imagine 60W being lost in that process (60W used and 60W wasted). Yes I have measured everything.
Ready? ok, there are forums, pages and videos explaining solar panels and how to produce energy, perfect, easy, but very few approach the topic of WHAT CAN YOU POWER WITH IT. Yes you can find information about 100w panel = you can power 90w electronics!!! well that's not true apparently. There are videos from professionals trying to explain this and they are long, boring, complex, and actually not clear. This sort of thing confused me until I found some sources being clear and straight to the point, saying "100W panel can't power 90W electronics, not even 80, it doesn't work that way". Some explain how the panels produce X watts (voltage x amperage) but those measurements are valid only without a load, and the moment you plug something directly you see the drop, meaning a 100W solar panel can't really power something near 100W.
I keep reading and I still find confusing sources of information, and most of it: a lot of people making questions, no real answers. It's not like a powerbank for your cellphone: 5V 1A, you can power your phone for about X hours, no way, in solar panels it's about "plug and test". The information on how to calculate the size of your system are kinda confusing to me, and most of them rely on big battery banks, I get it, but doesn't solve the relation between solar power output vs consumption, the numbers seen odd to me.
As much as I dislike the conclusion I keep finding evidence that if I have a 60W laptop, I won't be able to power it with a 100W solar panel, even at full sunlight. I keep finding contradicting information anyway.
Anyone care to expand in human terms? thanks in advance.
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