Dude. When the 500 watt came out i called and they said it wont work.for 3000 pro jackery. Now i see there website and the 500 watt solar panel say it works for 5000/3000/2000/1000v jackerys. Now i want to see a review with someone using them. I never used solar panels before but been looking and the 500 solar panel i want but idk if itll work. I also want to try to put onto a van for camping. Like screw it on a van since it seems its durable for weather use. Since im in south texas we mainly face heat which should be good for solar power. Or would yoy think a soloar panel like this isnt fit for rooftops of a camper van?
To be honest, I've never seen a bi-facial panel set up like the way they show these. But I've got some rigid 560 watt bi facial panels on my camper and they are really light (60 pounds each). They are amazing when the roof under them stays clean with no leaves, etc... I have one going on top of my truck too soon in an upcoming video, They are big, but could fit one on your van. They are rigid and strong with aluminum frames and mounting spots. They sell nice solar panels mounts for these types of panels,., even ones that just use adhesives. I've been showing off some of that in an upcoming video as well. Rig panels are better for more permanent mounting. You could also consider a few CIGS panels in series to get higher watts. The are newer, very flexible and can handle getting really beat up. They are super light and can mount even easier. The main problem with any panel set up is the voltage and wattage. Some power stations can only handle so much wattage and voltage range. Some power stations can run high and low voltage panels at the same time though like Jackery 5000 plus. Power stations have a limit to the voltage, limiting what panel you use or how many you have in series. The solarsaga 500 x panels are 48 volt and about 10 amps, almost the same as my big panels. I can't use my big panels on most of my smaller and medium sized power stations because they are too big. Easier thing for me to do is have big solar set up charging a big power station like the jackery 5000 plus . Then I will use the JAckery 5000 plus AC outlets to charge my power stations, since the ac charging is the fastest way to charge them. I can let my panels charge my jackery 5000 plus daily.
@adventure-tech ok. I already placed the order on 500 watts for my 3000 pro. I bought 2 of them. Hope it's good. But for vam life I'll look.up the ones you said. Thank you for ur knowledge and advice!
@@benitouchiha Cool. Thanks again for sharing your questions. I think out of all foldable panels, these look best to use in terms of setting them up, since the other foldable ones are a hassle to set up perfectly on all terrain. These new ones seem more versatile. If you used my link , it will help put some food in my fridge. Thank you! I didn't see the sale though, maybe the reports are delayed. I try to keep track and research most preferred products my audience is using. Also, most of the funding that goes into my research comes from commission also. I noticed a new trend recently away from EcoFlow products towards jackery and Anker recently. Very interesting since EcoFlow has been top preferred for a few years straight. I think your choice on getting two of these panels from JACKERY is smart. 1000 watts of potential solar power can get you up to about 3KwH of power per day . In the summer my panels were maxing out my MPPT at about 980 watts at times and bringing in over 3KwH some days. I had more power than I needed for my camper.
Use the Link, get a Deal and help support my channel at the same time:
➨ Get the Jackery SolarSaga 500 X Solar Panel here: shrsl.com/4rkp1
Dude. When the 500 watt came out i called and they said it wont work.for 3000 pro jackery. Now i see there website and the 500 watt solar panel say it works for 5000/3000/2000/1000v jackerys. Now i want to see a review with someone using them. I never used solar panels before but been looking and the 500 solar panel i want but idk if itll work. I also want to try to put onto a van for camping. Like screw it on a van since it seems its durable for weather use. Since im in south texas we mainly face heat which should be good for solar power. Or would yoy think a soloar panel like this isnt fit for rooftops of a camper van?
I don’t think it’s good for a permanent fixture,
@FranklinP-ss9ry why not? There the same material ain't it
To be honest, I've never seen a bi-facial panel set up like the way they show these. But I've got some rigid 560 watt bi facial panels on my camper and they are really light (60 pounds each). They are amazing when the roof under them stays clean with no leaves, etc... I have one going on top of my truck too soon in an upcoming video, They are big, but could fit one on your van. They are rigid and strong with aluminum frames and mounting spots. They sell nice solar panels mounts for these types of panels,., even ones that just use adhesives. I've been showing off some of that in an upcoming video as well. Rig panels are better for more permanent mounting. You could also consider a few CIGS panels in series to get higher watts. The are newer, very flexible and can handle getting really beat up. They are super light and can mount even easier. The main problem with any panel set up is the voltage and wattage. Some power stations can only handle so much wattage and voltage range. Some power stations can run high and low voltage panels at the same time though like Jackery 5000 plus. Power stations have a limit to the voltage, limiting what panel you use or how many you have in series. The solarsaga 500 x panels are 48 volt and about 10 amps, almost the same as my big panels. I can't use my big panels on most of my smaller and medium sized power stations because they are too big. Easier thing for me to do is have big solar set up charging a big power station like the jackery 5000 plus . Then I will use the JAckery 5000 plus AC outlets to charge my power stations, since the ac charging is the fastest way to charge them. I can let my panels charge my jackery 5000 plus daily.
@adventure-tech ok. I already placed the order on 500 watts for my 3000 pro. I bought 2 of them. Hope it's good. But for vam life I'll look.up the ones you said. Thank you for ur knowledge and advice!
@@benitouchiha Cool. Thanks again for sharing your questions. I think out of all foldable panels, these look best to use in terms of setting them up, since the other foldable ones are a hassle to set up perfectly on all terrain. These new ones seem more versatile. If you used my link , it will help put some food in my fridge. Thank you! I didn't see the sale though, maybe the reports are delayed. I try to keep track and research most preferred products my audience is using. Also, most of the funding that goes into my research comes from commission also. I noticed a new trend recently away from EcoFlow products towards jackery and Anker recently. Very interesting since EcoFlow has been top preferred for a few years straight. I think your choice on getting two of these panels from JACKERY is smart. 1000 watts of potential solar power can get you up to about 3KwH of power per day . In the summer my panels were maxing out my MPPT at about 980 watts at times and bringing in over 3KwH some days. I had more power than I needed for my camper.