Connecting Multiple Solar Panels
by kalefranklin in Workshop > Solar
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Connecting Multiple Solar Panels
Connecting Multiple Solar Panels
Theses are the Diodes that I use, they are the same ones that are used when building the panels. Find them here.
There are 3 ways to connect solar panels; parallel, series, and a combination of parallel and series. The first way I am going to talk about is parallel because this is probably the most common way that panels will be connected. For this example I am showing you connecting panels that are for a 12 volt system. This is how the panels that I have built in my other instructables are connected, and feed my solar charge controller.
In this first image there are 3 solar panels. If you look at the arrows along the white and red lines they are showing the direction of flow. The white line is the negative connection, all 3 panel negative wires are just simply tied together and to the wire that runs back to the negative connection on the charge controller.
The red line is the positive connection to the panels. You will see a symbol that looks like a triangle pointing down at a horizontal line. That symbol is for a diode, also known as a blocking diode. What this diode is doing is only allowing the positive electrons to flow in only one direction. When looking at this symbol the triangle points in the direction of flow, when looking at the diode in your hand there should be a colored line around one end of it. This line represents the line in the symbol that the triangle is pointing to. The non-colored end would be the “in” side, and the end with the colored line around it would be the “out” side. By installing these diodes on each panel it stops the electrons from going back into other panels. Diodes also use up a small amount of voltage, so don't go crazy and put to many in or you will to low to use.
If you look below the panel to the left you can follow the red arrows from the panel down and make a right turn to the diode. Then they continue through the diode and down the line to the end where they would be connected to a solar charge controller.
In the lower image the panels are connected in the same manner, positive to negative to reach 24 volts. In addition to blocking diode there are bypass diodes. The reason for these are to allow power to go around a panel that is shaded by something. It helps to keep that correct flow of power, not that it won’t flow in the correct way if their not there.
**Personal note** I have not seen any information on about efficiencies of panels connected in series with or without bypass diodes. I have not connected panels in this way either, all my panels are 12 volt and connected to a 12 volt system.
If you do not install bypass diodes, as in the first image on the previous step, I do not see why all panels would stop producing power. They may just produce less power than if there were blocking diodes installed. This is something that would have to be considered when building a panel system. Is the loss in power worth the cost of extra diodes?