Been running secondhand panels for about three years now and honestly, mixed bag. Got a set of 300W Canadians for £80 each off eBay — proper bargain compared to new. They've held up fine, still churning out the claimed specs according to my Victron MPPT monitoring.
The reality though:
- No warranty is the big one. One panel started delaminating after 18 months, had to bin it
- Harder to find matching voltage/current specs if you're expanding later
- Sellers don't always know the history — salt air, mechanical stress, dodgy storage all take their toll
- Testing them before you buy is tricky unless you've got decent kit
Where I reckon it works:
Emergency backup systems where you don't need peak efficiency. Prototype setups before committing to new panels. If you've got the testing knowledge (I-V curves, thermal imaging etc).
Where I'd avoid it:
If you're after warranty peace of mind. If space is tight and you need every watt. Long-term installs where you want to max ROI.
The maths is tempting — you can get panels at 30-50% new price — but factor in time sourcing, travel collecting them, potential dead stock. Sometimes that extra £200 for new Renogy or Fogstar panels is worth the hassle saved.
Reckon most people here are comfortable DIY testing? That's really the deciding factor. What's your setup look like — grid-tied or standalone?