I have two Japanese panels that were made in 1988 or 1992, I can't remember which. but they still put around 75% of their stated value in the best conditions I have subjected them to.
I also have a new Chinese panel and the maximum I have seen is around 75% of the stated output.
I use a Baird panel, three years on I have not noticed any drop in performance and I look at the performance levels ..a lot
In that time I can say also the panel has paid for itself.
My only issue is I should have allowed for expansion.
I have a 20 watt from around 2000 puts out 1.7 amps ( should be 1.8 amps)
Interestingly on the spec sheet ( on the back of the panel ) the rating is 14.5 watts!
The 20 watt rating is peak (what ever that means)
So ( I guess ) when buying 200watt panel you/me are never going to get 200 watts ov electricsity!
I dont think, so I'm not[do I exist?]
1992 1600td [ jx ] syncro panel van[leisuredrive camper ]
dave friday wrote:I have a 20 watt from around 2000 puts out 1.7 amps ( should be 1.8 amps)
Interestingly on the spec sheet ( on the back of the panel ) the rating is 14.5 watts!
The 20 watt rating is peak (what ever that means)
So ( I guess ) when buying 200watt panel you/me are never going to get 200 watts ov electricsity!
It depends on the charge state of you battery. The lower the voltage the higher the Amps will be. Ohms law.
I use a Baird panel, three years on I have not noticed any drop in performance and I look at the performance levels ..a lot
In that time I can say also the panel has paid for itself.
My only issue is I should have allowed for expansion.
There are others on a gin palace forum that I stumbled across but can't find at the mo.
Good to know your Baird panel is doing OK
I have just had hassle with returning for a refund a Lensun panel that had a cut/crack in its surface, so now looking to buy.
OK I see that these panels just stopped working, I assumed you meant performance.
I chose a board mounted polycarbonate covered panel rather than these flexible ones, to minimise any issues due to it's..er flexibility.
I'm sure like all things man made, things can go wrong, but thankfully these days the cost of a panel is relatively cheap to 10 years ago.
Not the right thing to stick down a flexi. I used an exterior silicone and it comes off easy enough without staining anything either. Hard to say on longevity of panels, solid or flexible but I think the thing thats likely to change is efficiency which may prompt owners to ditch their old ones in favour of better ones as the technology improves.
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Lensun not cheap either. It does seem to be the case that price has much less to do with reliability/efficiency than you'd think. Had no probs with the two flexis I've got and they were well under £100 each. Batteries always up to full scratch even on an overcast day. I don't like the ridiculous connectors that panels often come with though. You can end up with cable everywhere. I got rid of those and fitted a waterproof junction box instead.
Last edited by CovKid on 28 Oct 2016, 12:15, edited 1 time in total.
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