Dave Turpin
24th December 2010, 23:42
As promised, here is the write-up for the solar panels I am making.
These are going to look as professional as I can get them. They are 30 volt, 240W panels. They are a lot thinner than most professional machine-made panels that I have seen. The performance is good. Both panels I have made so far made 20v just from the fluorescent lights in the garage. I figure with some sunlight on them they should make the advertised 30 volts.
Design:
6"x6" polycrystalline PV cells, 60 per panel, in 6 columns of 10.
Material list:
Plywood, external, 5/16", 37"x64". $11.67 each at Home Depot.
Glass, 1/8", annealed, 37"x64". $50.00 each from a local glass shop.
Inside corner moulding, 3/4", about 18 feet worth, at $0.45 a foot from Home Depot. (The cheapest plastic crap you can find, because it is not structural, and you can join pieces of it together with a soldering iron)
PV cells, 6"x6", from eBay, pre-tabbed. I got 250 of them for $410 shipped, with about 10 broken in shipping. ($1.70 each)
Epoxy, UV stable, non-blushing. 1.5 gallons for $80 from a local shop. Use about 1/3 gallon per panel.
Construction adhesive. 1 tube, 24 ounces. $3.50 from Home Depot.
Total cost per panel: $191.27. That's $0.80 per watt.
Construction:
My prototype was not the prettiest panel. But it works. Took a couple days of swearing and bleeding until I figured out the best way to tackle the construction. I basically did everything backwards the first time. So these pictures are from my second panel, which took 5 total hours to make.
Step one:
http://i207.photobucket.com/albums/bb21/bpestilence/IMG_0609.jpg
Lay some spare plywood or cardboard flat on the ground. Then carefully lay down the glass, and lay a sheet of plywood over that. Center it up as best you can. The cuts that I got from Home Depot were about 1/4" off, so I centered it will a little glass visible from each edge. The moulding takes care of this discrepancy.
Step two:
http://i207.photobucket.com/albums/bb21/bpestilence/IMG_0610.jpg
http://i207.photobucket.com/albums/bb21/bpestilence/IMG_0611.jpg
http://i207.photobucket.com/albums/bb21/bpestilence/IMG_0612.jpg
Don't go crazy measuring the moulding with too much detail. Butt the moulding flat against the glass and plywood, and screw it together with 1/2" screws. I had the screws laying around. Mark the corners and cut at 45 degree angles, so that the line of the angle intercepts the corner of the glass or plywood, whichever is bigger.
http://i207.photobucket.com/albums/bb21/bpestilence/IMG_0613.jpg
Here is the benefit of the cheap plastic moulding. No waste. If one piece is not long enough to make an entire edge, ust cut another piece to fit and melt them together with a soldering iron. Remember, these are not structural, they just hold the glass in place.
Step 3:
http://i207.photobucket.com/albums/bb21/bpestilence/IMG_0614.jpg
Before putting on the last piece on the bottom edge, cut some 6" lengths of bus wire and fold them around the plywood. Put them about 3" in from the outside edge. These will be the positive and negative leads.
Step 4:
http://i207.photobucket.com/albums/bb21/bpestilence/IMG_0615.jpg
Now that this is done, pick up the plywood. Carefully move the glass aside (stand it up to prevent damage) and then place the plywood back down with the open edge of the moulding upward.
Step 5:
http://i207.photobucket.com/albums/bb21/bpestilence/IMG_0616.jpg
http://i207.photobucket.com/albums/bb21/bpestilence/IMG_0617.jpg
http://i207.photobucket.com/albums/bb21/bpestilence/IMG_0618.jpg
These are going to look as professional as I can get them. They are 30 volt, 240W panels. They are a lot thinner than most professional machine-made panels that I have seen. The performance is good. Both panels I have made so far made 20v just from the fluorescent lights in the garage. I figure with some sunlight on them they should make the advertised 30 volts.
Design:
6"x6" polycrystalline PV cells, 60 per panel, in 6 columns of 10.
Material list:
Plywood, external, 5/16", 37"x64". $11.67 each at Home Depot.
Glass, 1/8", annealed, 37"x64". $50.00 each from a local glass shop.
Inside corner moulding, 3/4", about 18 feet worth, at $0.45 a foot from Home Depot. (The cheapest plastic crap you can find, because it is not structural, and you can join pieces of it together with a soldering iron)
PV cells, 6"x6", from eBay, pre-tabbed. I got 250 of them for $410 shipped, with about 10 broken in shipping. ($1.70 each)
Epoxy, UV stable, non-blushing. 1.5 gallons for $80 from a local shop. Use about 1/3 gallon per panel.
Construction adhesive. 1 tube, 24 ounces. $3.50 from Home Depot.
Total cost per panel: $191.27. That's $0.80 per watt.
Construction:
My prototype was not the prettiest panel. But it works. Took a couple days of swearing and bleeding until I figured out the best way to tackle the construction. I basically did everything backwards the first time. So these pictures are from my second panel, which took 5 total hours to make.
Step one:
http://i207.photobucket.com/albums/bb21/bpestilence/IMG_0609.jpg
Lay some spare plywood or cardboard flat on the ground. Then carefully lay down the glass, and lay a sheet of plywood over that. Center it up as best you can. The cuts that I got from Home Depot were about 1/4" off, so I centered it will a little glass visible from each edge. The moulding takes care of this discrepancy.
Step two:
http://i207.photobucket.com/albums/bb21/bpestilence/IMG_0610.jpg
http://i207.photobucket.com/albums/bb21/bpestilence/IMG_0611.jpg
http://i207.photobucket.com/albums/bb21/bpestilence/IMG_0612.jpg
Don't go crazy measuring the moulding with too much detail. Butt the moulding flat against the glass and plywood, and screw it together with 1/2" screws. I had the screws laying around. Mark the corners and cut at 45 degree angles, so that the line of the angle intercepts the corner of the glass or plywood, whichever is bigger.
http://i207.photobucket.com/albums/bb21/bpestilence/IMG_0613.jpg
Here is the benefit of the cheap plastic moulding. No waste. If one piece is not long enough to make an entire edge, ust cut another piece to fit and melt them together with a soldering iron. Remember, these are not structural, they just hold the glass in place.
Step 3:
http://i207.photobucket.com/albums/bb21/bpestilence/IMG_0614.jpg
Before putting on the last piece on the bottom edge, cut some 6" lengths of bus wire and fold them around the plywood. Put them about 3" in from the outside edge. These will be the positive and negative leads.
Step 4:
http://i207.photobucket.com/albums/bb21/bpestilence/IMG_0615.jpg
Now that this is done, pick up the plywood. Carefully move the glass aside (stand it up to prevent damage) and then place the plywood back down with the open edge of the moulding upward.
Step 5:
http://i207.photobucket.com/albums/bb21/bpestilence/IMG_0616.jpg
http://i207.photobucket.com/albums/bb21/bpestilence/IMG_0617.jpg
http://i207.photobucket.com/albums/bb21/bpestilence/IMG_0618.jpg