Have these (2x 310w) for 2 years now on my boat and they are worth every cent because they aren't cheap to buy. Very tough panels but the junction boxes on mine have sun damage and are a concern, I would recommend the bottom mounted junction boxes. They harvest sunlight like no panel I've had before with a record 4kws produced in a single day compared to the 2.3kws from traditional glass panels which needed frame work to support the weight, These I lay on netting to keep cool on the boats roof having a 5cm air gap for Qld summers. Am atm saving for 2 x 430w panels to run the air-con off a seperate battery bank. Overall I love the low weight, Low profile and high output.
Hi mate, not sure where you're located but there is a place in rowville Victoria that will hook you up with the special double sided tape and other info to correctly install these with an air gap underneath. I think they are called solar 4 rvs or similar. ✌🏼
I put a 310w on my Hiace pop top camper - way better than crap heavy space draining 150w fold outs - mounted it on 5mm corflute strips - getting 30% output in winter - cant wait till spring / summer
Hi I ended up mounting the panel to my caravan, then sold the caravan. Lol I wouldn't hesitate recommending them though, I will definitely get more. Hopefully that helps
@@offgriddreaming5403 Someone got a great caravan! Better than they likely appreciated at first. I had some of the basic 100W Chinese flexible solar panels. They were bad, without a frame and just fell apart after a couple years. Now there are some Chinese flexibles with higher watts & with more durable looking shell. Still no frame though. And they have oddball voltages. This Sunman looks better. It has a frame and it has more usual voltages. I'd be more interested in the 285 version though... assuming it is a 60 cell version. That's because I don't use an MPPT -- just directly charge a LifePO4.