GeorgeB
ElectroHydraulics engineer (retired)
- Location
- Greenville SC
- Occupation
- Retired
That previous post wasn't worded very well, but what I meant was one could approximate a given day ideal angle by looking at which quarter that day falls in (and where in that quarter), and using the formulas on the solar panel tilt website. For my latitude of 43 degrees, I get summer: 15 degrees, spring and fall: 40 degrees, winter: 62 degrees. The ideal fixed annual tilt is 36 degrees (which is cool since it is constructible with compass and straight edge).
Although as a math guy, I would like to see the exact formula.
I tried to find these details when I had a small array installed 4 years ago, more for academic reasons (my roof is not adjustable, and for a small array, custom mounts would not be realistic) than practical.
Also a math guy (son has a degree in the Operations Research branch of maths), what I found is that the azimuth and elevation are readily determined. It is generally assumed that normal incidence maximizes production (energy conversion). What are not easily calculable are atmospheric effects. Shade for those with some shading "things" around is very hard to calculate.
I have a "small" gas flue from my furnace. It is ABOUT 3" in diameter and protrudes about 2' above the roof. I can watch dramatic production losses from the 2 nearer panels vs sun angle (well, really time) over especially in the morning and afternoon. Noon, +/- an hour has little if any shade.
The OP seems to want to charge a "small" battery, IIRC. What ___I___ would do if I really cared is to pick an angle from that reference. Then, rather than a fixed South direction, I would point it (NOT SCIENTIFIC) SSE from daybreak until about 1.5 hours before solar noon, S from 1.5 hours before until 1.5 hours after, then SSW from 1.5 hours after until sunset.
I'm in upstate South Carolina where clouds are common; real measurements without nature introduced variation are darned near impossible to even imagine. I paid for the enhanced reporting from my Enphase Envoy ... if anyone would like to see any detail, let me know. I'll share coordinates so you can see the layout on Google maps or earth. I'll certainly share graphical production (kW for several days, kWh over a longer period) with anyone. Nothing is confidential.
I bought it to POSSIBLY save a little money; payback should come in about 8 years. But really, it was to tell our kids we are environmentally "good". My problem is a wife who has moved every 7 or 8 years, and we'll probably not realize anything except the respect of our children. And I'm an unhealthy 70 in a 3 story house ... how dumb is that. But we're close to the grandkids.