• Cheap Home Solar Panels - 60pcs Mono Crystalline, PERC Solar Cell, Mono Solar Panel System 1
  • Cheap Home Solar Panels - 60pcs Mono Crystalline, PERC Solar Cell, Mono Solar Panel System 2
Cheap Home Solar Panels - 60pcs Mono Crystalline, PERC Solar Cell, Mono Solar Panel

Cheap Home Solar Panels - 60pcs Mono Crystalline, PERC Solar Cell, Mono Solar Panel

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Loading Port:
Shanghai
Payment Terms:
TT OR LC
Min Order Qty:
1000 pc
Supply Capability:
3000000 pc/month

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Specification

Material:
Monocrystalline Silicon
Max. Power(W):
320
Number of Cells(pieces):
60

Features:

High Output Up to 320W(300W-320W)

Perc Technology

5BB cells Reduce Cell Series Resistance

PID Free 96 Hours


Specification:

No.of cells and connections/ 60(6x10)

Dimension of module/           1650mmx992mmx35/40mm

60PCS mono crystalline, perc solar cell,Mono solar Panel60PCS mono crystalline, perc solar cell,Mono solar Panel

Certificate:


Cure for reference:

APPLICATIONS

`Solar power stations

`Rural electrification, Small home power systems

`Power supply for traffic, security, gas industry

`12V and 24V battery charging system

`Other industrial and commercial applications


FAQ

We have organized several common questions for our clients,may help you sincerely:

1.What price for each watt or PC?

It depends on the quantity, payment terms,brand etc.

2.How do you pack your products?

We have rich experience on how to pack the panels to make sure the safety on shipment when it arrives at the destination.

3.What is the delivery time?

It depends on the quantity and time you confirm order.

4.Can other port be OK?

Yes,it depends on your choice.But freight will change accordingly.

5.How can I get some samples?

You just need to arrange the shipping cost for arrangement after confirming with me.

 


Q: when solar panels have served their purpose, what is done with them?
Often they get scrapped out or landfilled. Photovoltaics cannot be refurbished. Solar collectors for heating air or water, could be concievably refitted with new clear covering, new insulation, and new heat exchanger, but unless it was a custom installed system you are trying to refurbish, it is more time economical to construct new ones, or to buy new ones.
Q: Hi, I have in my sailboat 2 2 V batteries. I would like to buy solar panel(s) in order to recharge them. As i am in mexico and there is always high sun . i think it is a good idea.Usage of the batteries is very light . I have found 5-2V pannels with 80mA that fit in the sailboat. I want to know if and how i can have like 5 to 0 of them set together to charge the batteries and what other material would i need.also, i would like to know what happend if the pannels only send on 5V in a 2 V battery? Is it still charging but on 40 % of the capacity a 2 v pannel would charge or its just not doing nothing ?
Taken at face value, it would take about 55 hours to re-charge a dead flat battery. However, you don't get 24hrs/day sunlight. Even worse, the output from a panel is only maximum when the sun is at 90 degrees to the surface. Let's assume you can find some way to track the sun. No battery should be allowed to discharge below about 50% so we can halve the recharge time. I would say about 4 days.
Q: About how much would it cost to purchase and install solar panels for the average American house so that the house can be off the power grid and use the same amount of electricity as it normally does?
Homes vary tremendously in their usage. It will be a factor of 0: between a conservative house, and a heavy use one. To get the answer for your own house, check the electric bills. Also, the answer for the size of solar electric system varies with the location of the house. A Minnesota residence may get only 2/3 or /2 of what an ideal California house gets, even though both are sunny. As a data point, our California house has no air conditioning, no electric heat, no pool, and no big screen TV. We use maybe 5 - 8 kWh a day on average (more in winter, less in summer). We have a 3 kW solar array on the roof, and it roughly keeps up with our usage.
Q: How about using Solar Panals to provide the electrical power to separate the H2 from the O? H2 would be fed into the engines carburator like a gas/air mixture ratio, but H2/air mixture ratio instead. How would you control the exact measurements?
H2 has more energy per weight – but requires twice the volume of fuel. It is unsafe to transport as a liquid or gas (usually in a carrier medium of some sort) Solar panels are expensive (low output per $) and expire after some use. They are dirty and energy inefficient to make too. However: hydroelectric, wind, and sea technologies may offer some improvements in costs with oil prices as high as they are.
Q: Monocrystalline panels are sooo expensive! Thanks for reading.
Since you are asking for a rather technical answer you should be aware that solar panels come in several varieties. Two broad categories are photovoltaic panels which have achieved marketable efficiencies of around 24% and solar thermal panels which are routinely achieving efficiencies of between 60 to 80% while they are also much cheaper than photovoltaic panels. So the short answer is solar thermal panels. But what can you do with solar thermal energy. The answer is just about everything you can do with light energy. Sometimes additional equipment makes the efficiency drop to near that of photovoltaic panels. The trick is to keep the devices as simple and as efficient as possible. Solar thermal can of course be used to heat our homes. But it can also be used directly for air conditioning. The type of air conditioner uses a slightly different principal but it is one of the oldest that was once used in ice houses before refrigerators. It is known as an absorption system. At some point you may want to make electricity from the sun's heat. The most efficient commercial systems are not photovoltaic but solar thermal. There are several commercial systems where increased scale improves efficiency. The most efficient is a solar parabolic dish system combined with a stirling engine. At around 30% efficiency it beats photovoltaic and other thermal systems. At this level of commercial development, the various systems are more often described as solar collectors rather than panels.
Q: I was thinking of having some installed on our rooftop and was wondering if it would be worth the cost? The house is located in Sac, Cali. The panels would face the sun 2 months out of the year and in the summer roughly 4 hours of straight sun.
Solar is too expensive system. It is relatively new. Everything new is top dollar. When the market gets flooded the cost will dramatically go down as everything like cell phones, computers etc.
Q: I got a really great deal on 2 houses because they were fixer-uppers. I'm living in one and the other I'm renting out. However, the previous owner did everything himself in 950 95, so needless to say, things are not to todays standards. Both houses need rewiring (there are no ceiling lights, few outlets, and mine has two old fuse boxes and the other has a breaker box but it pops the breaker a lot). The only reason they are still functional is because both houses use natural gas for water and heat, so otherwise, they electrical work is getting us by, but who knows for how long. I thought that maybe instead of redoing the electric, that I could just add solar panels to compensate for the small electric boxes. Also, since I would have to hire electricians to do all the work, which would be more cost effective (not including the decrease in utilities since I don't pay the utilities in the rental anyways)?
If there is already electricity on the street, you won't save anything up-front by adding solar. In fact, it will cost a lot more. You'd still have to have them wired up to code, plus have inverters and maybe a kit to sell power back to the utility. It may pay for itself in 20 years if the price of electricity rises. Otherwise, solar makes sense if you are miles from town and the utility wants $00,000 to run a power line to your house. (My figures are total guesswork - check with a local solar installer or two)
Q: Can solar panels be used for powering a wastewater treatment plant?
Yes, solar panels can be used to power a wastewater treatment plant. Solar energy can be harnessed and converted into electricity, making it a sustainable and environmentally friendly option for powering such facilities. The generated electricity can be utilized to operate various equipment and processes involved in wastewater treatment, reducing dependency on traditional power sources and minimizing the carbon footprint of the plant.
Q: How do you know when it is a good deal to buy a solar panel. For example, what is a good cost per watt, how many volts should I expect, etc.
Both might be bigger. When it is cloudy and little solar (iciness) you'll have a breeze. When it is nonetheless and sunny, you could have the solar. When the batteries are charged, extra vigour from the windmill can also be shunted right into a resistance heater in a water tank, preheating home water, decreasing that price. Downside of windmills: There is a few noise. you do desire a tower of a few form to get above treeline. It's mechanical, so it's going to want periodic renovation and would possibly holiday, or will put on out, or be broken in a windstorm. Panels will final for many years, simply have to be wiped clean of snow within the iciness, and washed off, in case you are living in a dusty subject. They are hard, however the glass can also be damaged.
Q: That one costs money but looks like it might work. I don't really have the money for it but if it works then it would probably be worth it. Do homemade solar panels really work or is it just a gimmick? I'm really interested to see if anyone has actually tried this and to see what they say about it.Thanks
The technology of the solar panels is way beyond any DIY project. You can buy pre-assembled panels and install them, but you also need the devices to make the DC they generate into the AC your home needs. Also you will need the batteries for the nights and the times when the sun does not shine. Solar/ photo voltaic generation does work but is not a cost effective way to reduce your reliance on the electrical grid as of this time. They cost 2 arms and a leg, and take many years to come close to break even on the electrical savings. Do a search on the amount of power each panel will generate and then compute how much power you need and what the costs are. I believe in solar power, but not for an individual residence is it practical. Good luck.

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