My Sprinter van build — 400W solar, 300Ah LiFePO4

by Marsh Lover · 2 years ago 1,185 views 37 replies
Marsh Lover
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Been working on getting my Sprinter sorted for extended off-grid stays and reckon I've landed on a decent setup. Thought I'd share what I've learnt so far.

The core:

  • 400W Renogy rigid panels split across the roof (two 200W units) — bit of overkill in winter but brilliant for shoulder seasons
  • Victron SmartSolar MPPT 100/50 controller. Honestly, the app integration is a game-changer for monitoring charge rates
  • 300Ah LiFePO4 bank (Fogstar) — cost a fair bit upfront but the cycle life and weight savings versus lead acid made sense for a vehicle build
  • Victron BMV-712 for battery monitoring because I wanted proper visibility into consumption patterns

Why this combo:
Went rigid panels instead of flexible because they're more efficient and I can service them easier. The LiFePO4 was the key decision — meant I could downsize from what would've been 600Ah lead acid, saving roughly 400kg. Van already carries enough weight.

Performance so far:
In decent sun I'm pulling 300-350W, which covers my fridge, lighting, and some laptop work without dipping the battery. Winter's another story obviously, but that's when I'm usually near the cabin anyway with mains backup.

The van's really become my base camp between projects rather than full-time living, which suits this setup perfectly. Still tweaking the loads and getting the monitoring dialled in, but can't complain.

😢 👍 Ed Campbell, Nige Scott, Ed Mason, Moor Lover
Panel Ewan
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The Renogy setup is solid for van life, but 400W with 300Ah LiFePO4 is a bit light for extended off-grid if you're running much beyond lighting and basic comms. What's your actual daily consumption looking like?

I'd be curious about your charge controller—if you're not running MPPT, you're leaving efficiency on the table, especially in British winter conditions. A Victron SmartSolar 100/30 would be the sensible upgrade path when budget allows.

One thing worth considering: that 300Ah bank won't recover quickly on cloudy weeks. I've got 600W on my narrowboat and I still creep into deficit December through February without careful management. Depending on your loads, you might want to plan for either auxiliary charging (leisure battery from alternator whilst mobile) or accept seasonal usage limits.

What battery management system have you gone with? And are the panels fixed or adjustable—makes a real difference on a moving platform.

😢 Nicola
Panel Steve
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Mate, you've got the solar equivalent of a sensible salad when you're craving a proper fry-up. 400W on a Sprinter is workable if you're disciplined, but "extended off-grid" and a kettle are going to have words.

The real question is: what's your actual draw? I've seen too many folk with

😂 Jane Wilson
Bay Tim
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Curious what your actual daily consumption looks like? I'm running a similar setup on my boat and found the maths quite different in practice versus what I'd assumed.

The 400W will absolutely crush it on a sunny June day, but come winter or extended cloud cover you'll notice the battery dropping faster than expected. Have you worked out your amp-hours per day across a typical week?

Also worth considering — what's your discharge strategy? I've found keeping the LiFePO4 between 20-80% rather than draining to zero makes the whole system feel more comfortable long-term, even if it means less usable capacity.

Renogy panels are decent enough, but pairing them with a decent MPPT matters just as much. What controller are you running?

Panel Wayne
Lisa Stewart
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Has anyone actually measured their daily draw in real conditions though? I'm asking because I'm planning something similar for my static caravan conversion and the numbers on paper look decent, but I'm wondering if winter usage changes the picture completely.

@BayTim — what's your consumption looking like on the boat? Are you running heating or just essentials? I'm trying to work out whether 400W is genuinely tight or if it depends entirely on lifestyle choices.

Also curious about the Renogy panels specifically — are they holding up well on a moving vehicle? I've heard the rigid ones are more robust than flexible alternatives, but wondering if anyone's had durability issues after a year or two of van life. Looking at either Renogy or possibly Fogstar for my build.

🤗 Lynn Knight
FormerCop
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400W sounds optimistic for a Sprinter unless you're parked in the Sahara half the year—British winter'll humble you quick. The real question @BayTim's asking is spot on: what's actually consuming the 300Ah daily?

Fridge, heating, laptop charging? Those three alone can drain 30-50Ah on a damp November day with no sun. I'd measure your actual draw over a week before declaring victory—most folk overestimate solar production by about 40% and underestimate consumption by the same margin.

300Ah LiFePO4 is decent capacity, but paired with 400W panels you're looking at maybe 2-3kWh realistic output on an average UK day. Doable for minimal consumption; tight otherwise. What's your battery management setup—Victron or Fogstar?

👍 Watt Liz, Borders Explorer
Defender Solar
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The winter reality is brutal, isn't it @FormerCop. I've got a similar footprint on my shepherds hut setup and genuinely see the 400W drop to maybe 120-150W usable on a December afternoon—that's assuming you're not shaded by trees or weather.

What @BayTim and @LisaStewart71 are getting at is spot on though. The actual daily draw matters far more than panel wattage. I found tracking my consumption for a fortnight absolutely eye-opening. Things like how often you're boiling a kettle, charging devices, running heating—it all compounds.

On a Sprinter, I'd personally focus on minimising draw rather than maximising panels. LED everything, a decent thermal setup so you're not running heaters constantly, and realistic about what 300Ah actually gives you on a dull week. The maths gets humbling fast when you account for British weather properly.

👍 Moor Lover
ExFirefighter42
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The winter issue is real, but don't overlook the actual maths on this. I ran 400W rigid panels on my old motorhome and kept detailed logs—you're looking at roughly 60-80W average output in January depending on your location and panel angle. That's the brutal truth.

However, 300Ah LiFePO4 shifts the dynamic considerably. Your real question should be: what's your actual daily consumption? If you're running minimal loads (12V LED lighting, 4G router, minimal heating), 400W with decent battery storage gets you through winter with disciplined usage and occasional sunny spells.

I'd suggest @MarshLover considers a small inverter for top-ups—even a 500W unit paired with a leisure battery charger when stationary makes a massive difference. Also worth investigating whether the Sprinter roof can handle additional panels. Soft panels add minimal weight if space allows.

What's your heating solution looking like?

👍 T6 Build, Frank Gibson, Tor Child
RetiredChef
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@ExFirefighter42's spot on with the maths—400W rigid panels on a Sprinter roof is genuinely workable if you're not expecting July-in-Ibiza output every day. Reality check: you'll see maybe 60-80W on a grey February afternoon in the Midlands, but that's fine if your 300Ah LiFePO4 isn't draining faster than a narrowboat through locks.

The real question is what you're actually running. Heating? Forget it—that's a diesel job. Fridge, laptop, and lights? You'll be golden most days, even winter. The trick nobody mentions: LiFePO4 gives you better useable capacity than lead-acid, so you're not starting from an empty cup like the old guard.

What's your charge controller—Victron MPPT?

👍 Steve Webb
LH_Marine
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The thread's heading toward the right conclusions, but worth flagging the installation angle here—literally. On a Sprinter roof, you're dealing with a fairly shallow pitch, so your actual output in winter will be closer to 60-70% of nameplate if you're not tilting. Fixed rigid panels at that angle work brilliantly for spring/autumn touring, but you'll notice the difference November through February.

I've got 400W Renogy rigids on my narrowboat and angle them on adjustable rails—takes two minutes to reset seasonally. For van life, that's often not practical, so you're looking at genuinely accepting lower winter yields and sizing battery accordingly.

The 300Ah LiFePO4 bit is sound, but if you're doing extended off-grid stays (your words), you need to be brutal about load management in dark months. A 5kWh battery on 400W fixed panels in December is tighter than it looks on paper.

What's your actual usage profile? That matters far more than the panel count. Heating parasitic drain kills more builds than undersized solar ever does.

👍 ❤️ Taffy73, Carol Cross
Battery Tim
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Roof angle is crucial—@LH_Marine's bang on there. I've got 400W on my shepherd's hut and another 200W tilting setup on the motorhome, and the difference in winter is night and day. Sprinter roof's pretty flat though, so you're fighting physics a bit.

Real question: what's your battery management like? 300Ah LiFePO4 is solid, but you'll need decent monitoring. I'm running Victron gear (bit pricey but worth it for the data) and honestly, that's what stops you from chasing your tail in winter.

Also consider where you're parked most—south-facing is ideal but rarely happens. If you're moving around, the flat-roof setup makes sense. If static, even a simple adjustable mount does wonders.

What's your load profile looking like? That'll tell you more than the wattage tbh.

😂 Ash Hermit
Carl Baker
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The roof angle issue is legit critical, but I'd add something most folk overlook with Sprinters specifically: thermal management on those rigid panels during summer. I've got 400W Renogy kit on my garden office and the performance delta between summer and winter is stark—you're looking at maybe 60-70% output on a hot day due to cell temperature degradation, even with decent airflow underneath.

On a van, you've got even less cooling potential. Worth factoring that into your winter energy budget calculations rather than just using nameplate figures.

One other thing worth considering: 300Ah LiFePO4 paired with 400W is reasonably balanced, but your charge controller matters enormously. A decent MPPT (I'd suggest Victron or Fogstar if you're budget-conscious) will squeeze another 15-20% out of those panels compared to PWM equivalents, especially during shoulder seasons when you're getting lower angle sunlight.

What amperage are you looking at on the charge controller? If you've gone undersized there, you're essentially leaving generation on the table.

😂 👍 Burn Baz, Linda Fisher
Downs Cruiser
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Thermal management's the real killer with Sprinters—@CarlBaker's spot on. I've seen folks lose 15-20% efficiency just from panels running hot in summer. Worth checking your array temps if you've got a decent multimeter.

One thing though: 400W sounds decent on paper, but roof orientation matters more than people think. If your van's sitting east-west (common for parking), you're already compromised. I'm currently tilting a 200W portable panel in my setup depending on season—bit faffy but honestly gives better yields than relying on fixed roof panels alone.

Also, with 300Ah LiFePO4 and 400W panels, you're looking at roughly 2-3 hours peak charging on a good day. Not exactly quick. Depends what you're running though—if it's just fridge and lights, you're golden. If you're thinking 3kW inverter and power tools, you'll feel it.

What's your actual daily draw? That'll tell you if you need more or if your setup's actually solid.

❤️ Trevor Parker
ExFirefighter
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1 year ago
#452

Had a thought on the thermal side—has anyone actually measured their battery temps under load during summer? I'm curious whether the issue is mainly the ambient heat in a metal box or if it's charge/discharge cycles pushing the LiFePO4 over its sweet spot (ideally 20-40°C).

@DownsCruiser, when you mention that 15-20% loss, is that purely from the panel efficiency dropping in heat, or are your BMS settings throttling charge rates? I've read Victron gear can be fairly aggressive about current limiting if the cells creep above 45°C.

On a Sprinter specifically, I'm wondering if passive ventilation behind the panels actually helps—saw someone mention a small gap between roof and panels to let air circulate, but never got a straight answer whether it actually works. Worth exploring before spending on active cooling?

What capacity LiFePO4 are you running? Curious if you're seeing the same thermal headaches at 300Ah as folks with smaller packs.

👍 Jim
John Dixon
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1 year ago
#458

Actually measured this last summer in mine—ran a thermocouple logger on the battery box whilst doing a full charge cycle in July heat. Started at 22°C, peaked at 37°C by mid-afternoon with the panels hammering it in. Lost roughly 8% usable capacity at that temperature, which isn't catastrophic but definitely noticeable over a week of heavy use.

The game-changer for me was adding a small 80mm brushless fan on a thermostat—kicks in at 35°C. Cost about £25 and proper sorted the problem. Mounted it on the side of the battery box with a baffle so air actually flows through, not just around. Sounds obvious but you'd be surprised how many folk just bolt a fan and call it done.

@ExFirefighter—if you're logging temps, also check your inverter case temps separately. My Victron was running hotter than the batteries themselves because it was tucked in a corner with no airflow. Repositioned it and the difference was stark.

@MarshLover—400W and 300Ah is sensible for a Sprinter.

👍 🤗 Kent Boater, Rusty Ranger, Brian Stewart, Moor Dweller and 1 other

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