If you have a dc watt meter then you can put it between the panels and the cc or between the cc and the batteries.
Connecting watt meter from solar panels to charge controller.
Connecting in series means joining the positive terminal of a solar panel to the negative terminal of the next solar panel until eventually you are left with one free positive and one free negative terminal of the array which are to be connected to the input either of the inverter in case of a grid tied system without a battery backup or the charge controller in case of a grid tied system.
A 24v 250 watt solar panel can be are rated as voc 30v and isc 8 4a.
Most 12 volt panels put out about 16 to 20 volts so if there is no regulation the batteries will be damaged from overcharging.
This is a waste of solar panel investment.
With an mppt solar charge controller however you get.
If you connect the solar panels first or disconnect the battery bank before disconnecting the solar panels the charge controller can get confused or even damaged.
If you connect a pwm solar charge controller to a battery bank at 11 5volts all you get from your solar panel is.
You can think of a charge controller in the same way that you would think of a hard drive on a computer.
On the other hand if our two solar panels have both different wattage and different voltage then parallel connection is not possible since the panel with the lowest voltage would behave like a load and would begin to absorb current instead of producing it with the.
The rule of thumb when connecting solar panels directly to a battery is never connect more than c 10 watts where c is the capacity of your battery.
Assuming the vmp voltage maximum power of the solar panel is in the 17 5 volt range then any pwm inexpensive solar charge controller can be used from 12 volt solar panel to 12 volt battery bank.
It regulates the voltage and current coming from the solar panels going to the battery.
11 5v x 8 4 a 96 6a.
For example a 110ah battery should never be connected to a panel more than 11w without a solar controller and if you are using a solar controller you do not need a blocking diode.
A charge controller or charge regulator is basically a voltage and or current regulator to keep batteries from overcharging.
To connect the rv solar system you would have to run a second set of cables from its charge controller directly to the terminals of the battery you want to charge.
They can be wired in parallel.
If you use a pwm cc you will see that you are getting less than the maximum possible amount of power from the panels and the power number measured at the panels could be within 10 or more lower than what you would read on the output of the cc.
So the rv solar system now has two sets of cables one to its own battery and another set to the battery you want to charge.
There is only a certain amount of data that a hard drive can store so you typically purchase a hard drive that is big enough for your needs.