The eBay item is for a 6a and pannel max is 8.5a.
No you only need enough current for your pump, it doesnt matter what the panel rating is.
Am I correct in thinking I will never get the 8.5.a out unless I’m on the equator at noon?
Not really I am 52degrees lattitude and can acheive 1000W/m2 quite often especially in summer.
I’m at Lat 38. From what I understand when the sun comes up the pannel will start producing in relation to the iridescence. So depending on the time of year an angle of the panel in the morning it would produce 25v at .5 a. And as the sun rises the full 30v output with amperage increasing throughout the day to say a max of 6 amp out of the 8.5a it could deliver at midday sun? As the day progresses it tapers off. Bell shape curve for the amperage. Then late int he day the when the sun is low the voltage begins to fall off.
yes
Seekonk is partly right about the buck regulator but I am hoping it has an undervoltage lockout at 17V input as it says thats what it's minimum is, all things being equal the pump will try dragging an amp that corresponds to 17W that is less than 10% of your panels rating so I am hoping in reasonable light it will start ok, bit of an experiment I am afraid. Sadly everything I have seen seems to be "charge controller" related and you did say you wanted to avoid any batteries. The only other way is DIY as Seekonk suggested
You might be better to beg or borrow an old car battery (used outside of course) as you have the charge controller already just to get you started, I note that product of yours doesnt include the words MPPT anywhere in its documentation so god knows what it actually does ?
I had two old car batteries. I think they were too far gone. Since my controller worked on 12 or 24 volt I tried parallel and serial configurations.
I ordered one of the buck regulators.
I had a class where we had solar electricy production modeling software. One could pick the make model of solar panel, place it at any latitude and at any angle and see the "ideal" output at any day and time of the year. Was actually quite intereing. Then they had an option to add cloud cover,
I wish I still had access to that program. For my latitude for a fixed panel mount at the ideal angle is how I leanred max pannel output only coccurs for 30 to 45 minutes 3 days out of the year.
Can you give me some idea about panel output? If you where you are or I were to mount a panel horizontal vs Ideal angle for our latitude what % differece in output would be? Are we talking 5% or 50%?