Never work on a car. I would read up on what Eindhoven did. Seems the original Stella from 2013 is still going strong. Here is an article including the information on the German company who did the encapsulation. https://sinovoltaics.com/technology/stella-lux-winner-of-world-solar-challenge-visits-shanghai/ Lawrence Rhodes
On Tuesday, April 20, 2021, 8:10:10 PM PDT, -Phil- <[email protected]> wrote: Solar cells bonded to the car directly require some sort of clear resin, epoxy, or polymer. This usually only lasts about a year before it starts to break down from UV damage. Not worth it at all! The sail boating guys experimented with the flexible solar panels, and they almost never make it 2 years even, and those use a much thicker top substrate. Problem is it's almost impossible to find a plastic that can pass the wavelengths needed to make PV work, and reject the high-energy UV that breaks apart the molecules in the plastic. This is why all real solar installations are using tempered glass as a top substrate. On Tue, Apr 20, 2021 at 8:03 PM Lawrence Rhodes via EV <[email protected]> wrote: > To make solar panels work on an EV they must be specially encapsulated > Sunpower cells. No panels. The area should be 5-6 Meter squared. Should yield > 1.5 to 1.8kw. This should charge most EVs at level 1. With a custom > controller you could directly connect to the HV battery but that would take > some doing. And as always with porky EV's we make and own like a Tesla or > Nissan Leaf it is better to to put the PV on the roof of your house but if > your car was under 1000 pounds that would be a different story. A custom > vehicle like the Stella solar cars built by the engineering students of > Eindhoven you could have a 1,200 mile range car...The team cost is estimated > at 330,000 euros. That said if you build a tube frame and scrimp on parts you > could probably get a couple of hundred miles range and charge in 10 hours of > sunlight(15kwh battery pack). It wouldn't be pretty but would function better > than most EV's That's just my take. Most people here say it can't be > done....but the students > of Eind > hoven did it...water it down and maybe you'll have a chance. > https://solarteameindhoven.nl/ look at what the winners of the World Solar > Challenge did and do what you can to copy. Lawrence Rhodes seeing is > believing. Crossing Australia in a few days averaging 43mph....it can be done > so to wrap up the best you can hope for is level 1 charging with extensive > customization of your EV. 19 hours of sun to charge the original Leaf. > Numbers don't lie. > > _______________________________________________ > Address messages to [email protected] > No other addresses in TO and CC fields > UNSUBSCRIBE: http://www.evdl.org/help/index.html#usub > ARCHIVE: http://www.evdl.org/archive/ > LIST INFO: http://lists.evdl.org/listinfo.cgi/ev-evdl.org > > _______________________________________________ Address messages to [email protected] No other addresses in TO and CC fields UNSUBSCRIBE: http://www.evdl.org/help/index.html#usub ARCHIVE: http://www.evdl.org/archive/ LIST INFO: http://lists.evdl.org/listinfo.cgi/ev-evdl.org
