I'm in the process of designing and installing a faux skylight that uses a large LED panel and I want to power it with a solar panel.
The LED panel uses about 70 watts at full brightness so I figured a 100 watt panel would be adequate for the job but I'm not sure.
All the solar panel specs. I've seen give me only maximum ratings but no clue as to the actual power available at different light levels.
I would have thought that solar panel specs. would include some sort of figure or figures that would indicate the actual power available at different light levels and would read something like:
Available Power at 10000 Lux: 50 watts.
or the illumination level at the panel's specified (labled) power (in this case 100 watt).
So, if buy a 100 watt panel will it supply enough power to keep my LED panel running at full brightness most of a sunny day or under cloudy conditions?
The way the specs. read I have no clear idea what panel I should buy. My 100 watts is an educated guess and I don't like making educated guesses in engineering.
The LED panel uses about 70 watts at full brightness so I figured a 100 watt panel would be adequate for the job but I'm not sure.
All the solar panel specs. I've seen give me only maximum ratings but no clue as to the actual power available at different light levels.
I would have thought that solar panel specs. would include some sort of figure or figures that would indicate the actual power available at different light levels and would read something like:
Available Power at 10000 Lux: 50 watts.
or the illumination level at the panel's specified (labled) power (in this case 100 watt).
So, if buy a 100 watt panel will it supply enough power to keep my LED panel running at full brightness most of a sunny day or under cloudy conditions?
The way the specs. read I have no clear idea what panel I should buy. My 100 watts is an educated guess and I don't like making educated guesses in engineering.