I'm looking at buying 200W to 300W of solar blanket but it appears to be a minefield.
E-bay feedback on many vendors strongly suggest they are simply lying about the blanket's output often suggesting twice, or more!, what the blanket is capable of.
Kings (4WDSupacentre) who I though were OK receive *terrible* responses on the Product Review website:
I and my friend have one from BCF , they are excellent XTM 200 watt very reasonable price ,especially if you are a member,think it was $299.oo looks feels top Quality .
Mike, a few years ago we bought a pair of "Reputable" brand 120w 3panel folding thingys. 12 months later they were being marketed as 100w units but we've never seen more than 60w out of them, weren't cheap either.
Biggest hassle is when they get hot they become quite supple. If they manage to bend over their support and the sun goes away, the bend or kink can become very difficult to correct.
Have now got 120w Atem units from Sunyee. These have alloy frames and so far seem much more durable, although they do get very warm on a bright day. We opted for 2 120w units purely for convenience as they are under 5kg each and stow in the front boot nicely. I did take the liberty of beefing up the wiring and binned the reg. that was fitted.
I and my friend have one from BCF , they are excellent XTM 200 watt very reasonable price ,especially if you are a member,think it was $299.oo looks feels top Quality .
I don't see any real specs (eg dimensions) on the BCF web site. On that basis I would stay away from this product.
The Kings web site, OTOH, does have full specs, and these would indicate that the claimed output is consistent with an efficiency of 17%. Therefore the negative reviews are puzzling to me.
I just noticed that the photo in the Kings review is of a 6-panel blanket laid out flat on the grass whereas the actual product has 5 panels with support legs.
-- Edited by dorian on Thursday 27th of May 2021 06:54:00 AM
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I and my friend have one from BCF , they are excellent XTM 200 watt very reasonable price ,especially if you are a member,think it was $299.oo looks feels top Quality .
I don't see any real specs (eg dimensions) on the BCF web site. On that basis I would stay away from this product.
The Kings web site, OTOH, does have full specs, and these would indicate that the claimed output is consistent with an efficiency of 17%. Therefore the negative reviews are puzzling to me.
I just noticed that the photo in the Kings review is of a 6-panel blanket laid out flat on the grass whereas the actual product has 5 panels with support legs.
-- Edited by dorian on Thursday 27th of May 2021 06:54:00 AM
A good mate of mine bought one of these solar blankets and while it looked good (his words) he was never able to get much in the way of charge out of it.
He decided that it was the way it was being presented to the sun so he got some aluminium tubing and built a frame that he could easily clip the blanket to.
His new frame meant that the panel was presented at a suitable angle to the sun and could be moved as the day progressed to collect the maximum solar energy.
From memory he also mucked around with the wiring and the regulator but I am not sure what he did.
It seems Kings solar blankets don't like water, it causes corrosion of the internal panel link wires which makes them about as much use as an ashtray on a motorbike.
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I have a 250W blanket which can produce 250W when it's clean, dry and cold. If it's not spotlessly clean or if it has a bit of morning dew the output will drop to under 200W. Even in winter under noon sun it gets quite hot and the output drops to under 100W.
Now after a couple of years the plastic (or whatever it is) is becoming a bit cloudy in spots and the max attainable output is sub 200W
As far as I'm concerned it's a crock. Yes, it was cheap and it's convenient and it's pretty light but it's not worth a bad haircut.
I reckon the old adage of "buy cheap, buy twice" holds true.
It seems Kings solar blankets don't like water, it causes corrosion of the internal panel link wires which makes them about as much use as an ashtray on a motorbike.
It seems Kings solar blankets don't like water, it causes corrosion of the internal panel link wires which makes them about as much use as an ashtray on a motorbike.
Even a bad haircut comes good after a few weeks !
You mean that if I buy one, it gets wet and the wiring corrodes, but I wait a few weeks it will repair itself!?
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"I beseech you in the bowels of Christ think it possible you may be mistaken"
Oliver Cromwell, 3rd August 1650 - in a letter to the General Assembly of the Kirk of Scotland
Can anyone recommend a solar blanket they *know*, because they have measured it, performs to its specification?
No one here can answer this question as only about 3 of us have a DC clamp meter & the 3 of us with a clamp meter wouldn't buy a blanket to start with.
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Whenarewethere wrote: No one here can answer this question as only about 3 of us have a DC clamp meter & the 3 of us with a clamp meter wouldn't buy a blanket to start with.
There are well established, and more accurate, methods of measuring DC current than using a Hall Effect device.
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"I beseech you in the bowels of Christ think it possible you may be mistaken"
Oliver Cromwell, 3rd August 1650 - in a letter to the General Assembly of the Kirk of Scotland
I've gone off solar blankets now, I don't want something which if it gets wet falls apart. This aspect of some (all?) solar blankets should be much more widely known and I would expect reputable retailers to make it clear rather than hiding it away in the small print.
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"I beseech you in the bowels of Christ think it possible you may be mistaken"
Oliver Cromwell, 3rd August 1650 - in a letter to the General Assembly of the Kirk of Scotland
Whenarewethere wrote: No one here can answer this question as only about 3 of us have a DC clamp meter & the 3 of us with a clamp meter wouldn't buy a blanket to start with.
There are well established, and more accurate, methods of measuring DC current than using a Hall Effect device.
Probably so. but they are easy to use & accurate enough for this exercise. So if you have one, why not.
I have an ATEM Power blanket and it is only used as a supplement and as a back-up in case the main system fails.
It's a very handy folding / bendable unit that is about the size of a large brief case with a convenient handle.
I'm not certain what amperage I have achieved but to the best of my memory the last time I used it was down the Snowy in winter and was laying flat on the ground (not the best attitude) and I'm pretty certain it was around 15 amps - which is quite respectable.
Do your reading, there's a couple of types of material used in the panels "monocrystalline and polycrystalline.
Monocrystalline is superior but not by country miles.
You need to be careful because some smarty sellers will ask the higher price for the lesser type.
And "quoted" outputs can be taken with a kilo of salt in so many cases.
When you get one an Anderson plug on the chassis with HEAVY leads back to the
battery is all you'll need. The blankets come with a controller and can be hooked
simultaneously with whatever other charging units that you have.
Be very careful. Read up and use respectable purveyors!
-- Edited by Brodie Allen on Friday 20th of August 2021 09:23:37 AM
-- Edited by Brodie Allen on Friday 20th of August 2021 09:26:51 AM
Pardon my ignorance but using my multimeter, when the portable panel is clipped to a battery can I measure the amperage at any time or does the battery need to be quite flat and receiving high charge??
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Pardon my ignorance but using my multimeter, when the portable panel is clipped to a battery can I measure the amperage at any time or does the battery need to be quite flat and receiving high charge??
No...you can measure the amperage at anytime. When the battery is absolutely full you should see the amperage limited. This is where a bluetooth enabled MPPT regulator is very handy for collecting data.
If you use a MPPT the controller will maintain a slightly higher voltage to charge to maintain maximum amps. Until the controller sees that the battery then needs to go to float.
So you really need to measure amps at a range of voltages to get an overall picture.
Voltage down a bit but 11.3amps total from 120 watts of solid solar panels, not rubbish blankets, using Victron 100/20 with panel cooling & 4awg wiring to squeeze blood out of a stone!
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Procrastination, mankind's greatest labour saving device!
50L custom fuel rack 6x20W 100/20mppt 4x26Ah gel 28L super insulated fridge TPMS 3 ARB compressors heatsink fan cooled 4L tank aftercooler Air/water OCD cleaning 4 stage car acoustic insulation.