Description
DOKIO 300w Solar Panel Kit Mono Portable Flexible Folding
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Our products have different powers in different environments. The energy is affected by the angle and intensity of sunlight. Therefore, I suggest that customers use them as much as possible with batteries or car batteries. Although it can be used without batteries, the current is not stable.
This solar panel packs 300W of power, but it only weighs a mere 7.5kg
Unique foldable design, enable to be mounted on an RV, boat, cabin, tent, car, tree or any other irregular surface. Making it perfect for home, nature trips, hiking, camping, fishing, picnic, sailing or other outdoor activities.
Specification
* Maximum Power: 300W
* Optimum Operating Current (Imp): 12.22A
* Optimum Operating Voltage (Vmp): 18.00V
* Short-Circuit Current (Isc):18.03 A
* Open-Circuit Voltage (Voc): 22.5V
* Maximum System Voltage:600V DC (UL)
*Dimension:39*21*0.9inch (100*54*2.4cm)
* Net Weight:17lb (7.5kg)
*Package Weight:18lb (8.2kg) (including wire and controller)
Package Contents:
1 x Dokio 300W Foldable solar panel
Virgil Settle (verified owner) –
Given that there were no reviews on this one, I took a bit of a chance. The panel is foldable and flexible. A bit larger than I expected, but I should have read the description more closely. I bought this to keep our Goalzero Yeti 1000 Lithium charged when camping. This panel was much cheaper than the Goalzero panels per watt, and folds up nicely for travel. It comes with a small charge controller with input from the panel, outputs for battery connection, 12v light, and two USB outputs. In an initial test, I hooked it to a car battery and it seemed to work well. However, since I bought it for the goalzero, I later modified the cable from the panel with Anderson Power Pole connectors. On a clear day around 2pm in mid September in NC, I was getting over 180 watts going into my Goalzero. That’s of course using Goalzero’s built in PWM controller, not the optional MPPT controller. I figure 60% of stated output is par for the course with flexible panels. I have a rigid Renology 100W panel that I tested on the same day and was only getting 65 watts. May spring for the MPPT controller for the Goalzero later. I doubt I’ll ever use the Dokio charge controller. All in all, the panel performs well, and folds up very neatly for travel. We’ll see how it durable it is long term.