Anyone have panels on their roof? I am going to mount a flexible panel under my Gamiviti roof rack and wonder if there are any that fit better than others. I am posting here because fit is my primary concern. Looking for 200W or so.
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No experience with solar panels on vehicles, but DIY'd a 11kw system for the house. For what it's worth, any sort of shading (like the roof rack) will typically DRAMATICALLY lower overall output.Anyone have panels on their roof? I am going to mount a flexible panel under my Gamiviti roof rack and wonder if there are any that fit better than others. I am posting here because fit is my primary concern. Looking for 200W or so.
I think your logic is sound. I would find a rigid panel (or two) to mount under the rack.On the over/under issue - I use the rack to haul stuff around. Its not just for show.
So the problem that I am trying to solve is the battery life in the heat while sitting around. I could probably just turn the fridge off, but then I wouldn't have cold drinks in the truck whenever. Its a pretty seriously first world issue.
The fridge draws +/- 50W when its hot so I figured that if I had 200W under the rack with a 100W output I could buy days worth of power. I have an 800W charger for when the truck is running which works great while I am driving the truck (rainy weather), but the truck can sit for a week at a time when the weather is nice.
I thought about a panel for the hood, but the Cascadias are just too expensive for me to buy every 3 years.
It partially depends on the tech in the panel, but I'd be very surprised if you got 50w out of a 200w panel that had shading from a roof rack. The Gamiviti rack would likely cast shade across all strings inside the panel (assuming they're even broken up like that in flexible panels - they may just all be in one long series string of solar cells within the panel).On the over/under issue - I use the rack to haul stuff around. Its not just for show.
So the problem that I am trying to solve is the battery life in the heat while sitting around. I could probably just turn the fridge off, but then I wouldn't have cold drinks in the truck whenever. Its a pretty seriously first world issue.
The fridge draws +/- 50W when its hot so I figured that if I had 200W under the rack with a 100W output I could buy days worth of power. I have an 800W charger for when the truck is running which works great while I am driving the truck (rainy weather), but the truck can sit for a week at a time when the weather is nice.
I thought about a panel for the hood, but the Cascadias are just too expensive for me to buy every 3 years.
I have a couple of Eco-Flow rigid panels, but the fit is going to be very tight. I think that I will pop the rack off and put them under it in the yard tomorrow for a little "test run" to see how bad the output drops.I think your logic is sound. I would find a rigid panel (or two) to mount under the rack.
There ya go! A practical experiment will certainly tell you more than my (mostly informed) engineering guesses, hahaha.I have a couple of Eco-Flow rigid panels, but the fit is going to be very tight. I think that I will pop the rack off and put them under it in the yard tomorrow for a little "test run" to see how bad the output drops.
The Gamiviti rack sits close to the truck and the front is already raised. So the rigid panels will barely fit. My worry is that because they will be virtually against the rack, they will break. I love the rack, but they didn't design it for things underneath. I may have to rethink and just use a trailer to go get 2x4's....
