Gary King wrote:I'm wondering if the JRA brains trust can answer a question about solar controllers.
I'm planning on a 12V system, 100W solar panels, 2 x 100Ah batteries and the total lighting load would be around 10A (all LED's) - make it 15A when the laptop is charging. So I figure a 20A controller would be fine.
However, if I add a 500W inverter to the circuit (for intermittent use), which could draw 40+ Amps, it would overwhelm the output of the controller.
Is it such a big deal for the inverter to bypass the controller and wire directly to the battery (with fuse)? Or do I need to pony up for a larger capacity controller?
I think you have got good answers...including size the solar controller to your solar panels, not your loads. But one more note applies to that:
Some solar controllers (Mine is one; a Morningstar SunSaver 15MPPT) have a load output. This is designed to power something that you want to turn off if your batteries get too low. (irrigation pumps, for example) I can't think of any reason to use THAT output aboard a boat.
I picked the model I did for several reasons, one being that it appeared to be less dependent on fans than larger models, although it does let (salty) air flow through the unit passively to cool it.
My whole system is two 140W solar panels (Kyocera), that controller, and a smart battery monitor (Xantrex LinkLITE) which watches the full state of charge of my house bank plus the starting bank voltage.
This sounds pretty similar to the other recommendations you have already got.
The system works well for me, and I actually have more generating capacity than I've needed (so far). While at anchor my batteries got topped up almost every day.