AnswerID: 53080 Submitted: Saturday, Apr 03, 2004 at 17:14
phil
replied:
Depends what you mean by "smallish". A 6 watt panel will not ever give over 0.5 amp, generally much less, and this is quite safe to apply to the battery without any regulation.
Solar panels produce quite high voltages in
bright light but when connected to a battery they are essentially at a constant voltage and deliver a current depending on the light intensity. An average of only about 0.2 amp over 24 hours is about right to keep a battery in full charge. The battery voltage will probably be mush less than when the alternator is charging.
Phil
Reply 3 of 3
FollowupID: 314860 Submitted:
Saturday, Apr 03, 2004 at 21:58
Martyn (WA) posted:
Phil,
It's rated at 350 milliamps, 5 watts at 24 volts, well that's what's on the back anyway. I tried the panel out today and it wouldn't light up a normal 5 W light globe is that normal? Not sure how to check the panel actually works, I get a voltage reading no problem.
FollowUp 1 of 2
FollowupID: 315071 Submitted:
Tuesday, Apr 06, 2004 at 11:39
phil posted:
Matryn,
Connect the panel to a 12v battery and use an ammeter to measure the actual charging current. Most multimeters will have a current range which is sufficient to handle the small current from this panel. It will be less than 350 ma since this is the short circuit current when in illumination of 1000 watts/sq metre. Your sunlight will probably be less than this.
Not sure why it did not light up the 5W bulb. It should show some glow.
Phil
FollowUp 2 of 2