Hi,
I just bought a solar panel for my car which has a regulated 14.4 V output, allowing me to directly charge the car's AGM battery from it. It's a 60 W panel, so realistically it might output say 50 W => max. 4 Amp under 14.4 Volt.
My question is, is it OK to simply connect it to the AGM battery like this? I mean it's a CV charging with 14.4 Volt, limited to max 4 Amp. Is this OK for the AGM battery? Or I need to buy a PWM / MPPT solar charge controller (heavy and big) which supports the 3 phase charging.
Hi,
60 watts is a lot for a single battery unless you dont get much sunlight during a typical day or you get a lot of clouds over several days.
20 watts would do it and then probably never overpower the battery.
What you really have to do is monitor at least the voltage and see what it goes up to and what it goes down to at night before the next morning when the sun starts to energize the panel again. What can happen is the voltage can ratchet up over days and weeks and go too high.
For example, on the first day it might take it up to 14.5v and then at night till the next morning drop down to 13.5v, then the next day it might take it up to 14.6v then at night till the next morning drop down to 13.6v, then the next day up to 14.7v and then 13.7v, then 14.8v then 13.8v, etc., etc.
This would mean that it is starting to over charge.
If it goes up to 14.5v the first day then 13.4 at night, then 14.4v the second day and 13.3 at night, then 14.3v the third day and 13.2 at night, you know it is undercharging.
It wont happen that fast though it could happen over two weeks where you will see a difference like that, so you might have to compare week by week.
When it is regulated properly, the average will keep it at relatively constant up and down levels, like 14.4 and 13.4v, and that will repeat with the same amount of sunlight each day.
Monitoring like this will give you a feel for what is going on.
With a 60 watt panel i would say it will over charge at some point without a controller that limits the upper end voltage. For some batteries even 14.0v is high enough, and for yours probably 14.2v to 14.4v would be high enough, but like i mentioned above keep an eye on the voltage levels during the peak sunlight of the day and in the morning just before sunrise.
The charge for a battery is measured over time and the current level. 4 amps is pretty high when it charges over a full day of sunlight. If you have a 60 ampere hour battery and you charge it at 4 amps for 8 hours (for example) that's already 32 ampere hours, which is half the capacity of the battery, which should never be required. The normal self discharge of a 60 ampere hour battery per day would probably be around less than 3 ampere hours, period, which means 4 amps for LESS than ONE hour, per day. It would really need only about 1 amp for 3 hours for example, or 1/2 amp for 6 hours.
So you see why 60 watts is a lot. 20 watts would probably do it but i dont know if you have any issues like shading during part of the day. For that or any other problems you have to determine by way of the monitoring process over weeks. It's not hard to do, just keep checking it until you know what works. That's the only way to be sure though as no amount of theory will ever get you there without measurements.