Question

Parallel vs series solar panels — which is better?

by Cornish Nomad · 1 year ago 675 views 28 replies
Cornish Nomad
Cornish Nomad
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1 year ago
#631

Right, so I'm trying to work out the best config for my narrowboat's roof setup and I'm getting conflicting advice down the pub, which is never ideal.

Currently eyeing up four 400W Renogy panels for charging my Victron MPPT controller, but I'm stuck on whether to wire them in series or parallel. My mate reckons series because "voltage innit" but my sister (who's actually qualified) says parallel because I've got limited roof space and shading from the water tower next door.

Here's my situation:

  • 48V lithium battery bank (LiFePO4)
  • Victron SmartSolar 250/100 MPPT controller
  • Average cloud cover (it's Cornwall, so... yeah)
  • Some partial shading issues mid-afternoon from nearby structures
  • Limited roof real estate on the boat

I'm guessing series gives me better voltage in cloudy conditions, but parallel means I won't lose the whole array if one panel gets shaded? Is that oversimplifying it massively?

Also, does it actually matter that much or am I overthinking this like I do with everything else?

Cheers in advance, and if anyone's got a narrowboat setup they're happy with, I'm all ears.

👍 Hazel Megan, RetiredElectrician84, Berlingo Solar
Foggy
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1 year ago
#632

@CornishNomad - For a narrowboat setup, you'll want to think about your charge controller and battery voltage first, mate. That'll determine your config.

Series gets you higher voltage (better for longer cable runs if your batteries are tucked away), but shading on even one panel tanks your whole string. Parallel keeps voltage constant but needs thicker cabling.

Most narrowboaters I've seen go series-parallel: two strings of two panels each. Gives you decent voltage, reasonable current, and you're not completely stuffed if a panel gets shaded by your chimney or whatever.

What's your battery voltage and charge controller spec? That'll make the decision for you really.

👍 😂 Dawn Young, Marine Nige, Dai Webb, BlownFuse19 and 1 other
48VWizard
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#633

The real question isn't panels, it's your charge controller. I went through this with my tiny house setup and nearly made a hash of it.

Series wins you better voltage for longer cable runs (crucial on a narrowboat where you might have 10+ metres to your battery bank). Parallel gives you redundancy—lose one panel and you're still harvesting. With four 400W panels, you're looking at either 2S2P or full series depending on your controller.

What's your current battery voltage and how far are the panels from your charge point? That'll determine everything. I'm running a Victron MPPT 100/50 with 48V lithium, so I went full series, but narrowboat constraints are different beast.

Also worth noting—Renogy's quality is solid but check if you're getting their matched pairs for parallel configs. Mismatched modules in parallel will cause all sorts of headaches.

👍 Crafty Spanner, Valley Nomad, Willow Mark, Charlie Morgan
Marine Gaz
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1 year ago
#635

The charge controller is definitely key — @Foggy and @48VWizard are spot on there. But for a narrowboat specifically, series usually wins out.

Four 400W panels in series gives you proper voltage for a Victron MPPT, especially if you're running 48V lithium (which most of us end up doing eventually). You'll get better cable runs and voltage regulation across the length of a boat. Plus less voltage drop headaches.

Parallel's only really better if you've got serious shading issues or you're stuck with a cheap PWM controller.

What's your battery setup and what charge controller are you thinking? That'll determine whether series actually works for you or if you need a hybrid approach.

👍 Quiet Skipper, Ella Hamilton
LH_Marine
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1 year ago
#839

Right, the lads above have nailed the charge controller bit. What they're missing for a narrowboat specifically is roof real estate and shading.

Series config gives you higher voltage, which means thinner cables and less resistive loss over longer runs (critical on a narrowboat where your controller might be tucked away below deck). You're also less fussed about partial shading killing your entire string since you've got decent spacing on a 60ft roof.

Parallel works better if you've got awkward obstructions—chimney stack, solar vent, whatever—where panels get partial shade at different times of day. Loss is more graceful.

Four 400W panels in series into a 48V MPPT (Victron SmartSolar or equivalent) is honestly the sweet spot for most narrowboats running domestic systems. You'll hit good voltage margins without burning out your controller.

What's your actual battery voltage and controller spec? That'll confirm whether series makes sense for you.

😢 Emma Jackson, Ian Hall, Mandy Clark
Emma Edwards
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#899

Depends on your charge controller, tbh. What are you running?

If it's a 48V MPPT (like a Victron), series is generally better — higher voltage means less current loss over the cable runs, which matters on a boat where you're often away from the panels. Four 400W Renogy in series gets you around 160V which is sweet spot for most controllers.

Only go parallel if you're stuck with PWM or a dodgy old controller. The voltage drop thing becomes a real headache on a narrowboat — I learned that the hard way with my cabin setup and ended up rewiring the lot.

Space constraints might push you toward series anyway since boats aren't exactly generous with roof room. Angle matters more than config on a moving platform though.

What controller have you got spec'd?

Steve Webb
Anne Butler
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#936

Series all the way for a narrowboat — those 400W Renogys in series will play nicely with a decent 48V MPPT (Victron or similar) and you'll actually get usable voltage even when it's absolutely belting down rain, which on the canals is... frequently.

Parallel is basically admitting defeat if your roof's got any shadow at all, and let's face it, narrowboats and shade go together like tea and biscuits. Plus you'd need hefty cable runs to avoid resistive losses, which on a boat is just asking for crispy wiring.

@CornishNomad — what charge controller are you running? That's your actual answer wrapped up in one question.

SX_Camper
WheresMeWires
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#979

The real constraint you haven't mentioned yet is your roof space and wiring runs. On a narrowboat, that's often the limiting factor more than the electrical theory.

Series config works brilliantly if you've got the string length — four 400W panels in series will give you roughly 160V open circuit (depending on temperature), which sits nicely in a 48V MPPT's sweet spot. You'll get better efficiency and lower cable losses with thinner gauge wire, which matters when you're routing cables through a narrow cabin.

That said, if your roof geometry is awkward or you're shading issues at certain times of day, parallel or a 2s2p configuration gives you flexibility. A shaded panel in series tanks your whole string's output; in parallel it's just that panel.

What's your charge controller spec and how's your roof layout? That'll determine whether series actually works for your setup. If you're tight on space or dealing with partial shading from the weed hatch or fridge vent, you might find parallel more practical despite the slightly heavier cabling.

😂 Tony Phillips
Linda Clark
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#1014

Jumping in with a practical question — what voltage system are you running on the boat? That's going to be your primary constraint here.

The series vs parallel debate often gets bogged down, but @EmmaEdwards82's got it right about the charge controller being the deciding factor. If you're pushing 48V with a Victron MPPT, series makes sense for efficiency. But if you're on a smaller 12V or 24V system, you might be forced into parallel anyway because your controller won't handle the voltage.

Also worth considering: what's your actual roof real estate like? I've got limited space on my current setup and found that wiring runs become a proper headache once you start thinking about voltage drop over longer cable runs to an external controller. Narrowboat roofs are usually quite exposed too — weather resistance of your connectors and weatherproofing around cable entries matters more than you'd think.

Have you already got a controller sorted, or are you choosing panels first? That'll genuinely dictate your best approach here.

👍 😂 Dawn, Stacey26, Pete Wood, Heath Child and 1 other
RetiredElectrician
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#1058

Ah, the classic narrowboat dilemma — roof space measured in inches, ambitions measured in kilowatts.

Series is theoretically lovely for voltage and MPPT efficiency, but here's the rub: one panel gets shaded by a chimney or your mate's head poking out a window, and the whole string drops to that one panel's output.

👍 Lazy Bodger, Thommo85, Jane Ward
Tor Jake
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#1172

Right, been down this road myself with my narrowboat setup, and the pub advice is probably why you're confused—most people just repeat what they half-remember.

The real issue nobody's mentioned yet: cable losses over distance. On a narrowboat, your battery bank is likely tucked away below, maybe 10-15 metres of run through the cabin. Series config means higher voltage, lower current—so thinner cables, less voltage drop. That matters more than you'd think on a 12V or 24V system.

Four 400W panels in series gets you proper voltage headroom for your charge controller (assuming 48V nominal), which is what I'd push for if your space allows. But here's the kicker—if you've only got a modest roof strip, parallel might be your only option physically, and that's fine. Just size your cables properly or you'll lose efficiency to resistance.

What's your current battery voltage? And roughly how long's your cable run? That'll tell you straight whether series or a hybrid approach makes sense.

The boat life means compromises, but they don't have to be daft ones.

Lazy Ranger
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#1293

Practical answer: what's your charge controller? That's what actually decides this for you, not the panels themselves.

If you're running 48V with a proper MPPT (Victron or similar), series all the way — higher voltage means thinner cables and less loss over the length of a narrowboat. Four 400W panels in series gives you proper voltage to play with.

If you're stuck with a cheap PWM controller or 12V system, you're basically limited to parallel and accepting you'll lose some efficiency to cable resistance. But honestly, on a narrowboat roof you've probably got decent irradiance angles, so series-wired into an MPPT is the move.

The pub consensus usually hovers around "just chuck them on and hope," which explains why half of them catch fire in summer.

😢 Moor Lover
DODGuy
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#1420

@LazyRanger's spot on — charge controller is the real limiting factor here.

For narrowboats specifically, most folks run MPPT controllers (Victron SmartSolar is the go-to), and they handle series configs better. Four 400W panels in series gives you higher voltage, which is more efficient over longer cable runs to your battery bank. Plus you get better performance in partial shade, which matters when you're moored under trees.

Series does mean if one panel gets shaded you lose output from all of them, but on a boat you're usually moving around enough that it's not a huge issue.

Only go parallel if you've got a basic PWM controller — cheaper upfront but you'll waste energy through resistance. Not worth it for four quality panels.

What's your current setup? Battery voltage, controller type, cable length from roof to batteries? That'll confirm which way makes sense for your boat.

👍 Liz, Macca73
JackeryGuy
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1 year ago
#1434

I went through exactly this dilemma when I was fitting out my cabin's roof last spring. The thing that clicked for it me was realising the charge controller is genuinely the bottleneck—@LazyRanger's nailed it there.

For your narrowboat with four 400W panels, series gets you higher voltage (better for longer cable runs, less losses), but you're then limited by shading. Even one panel partially shaded tanks the whole string's output, which is a nightmare on a boat where trees and angles change constantly.

Parallel keeps voltage lower but gives you flexibility—one panel gets shaded, the other three still produce. Trade-off is thicker cabling and potential voltage drop if you're running long distances.

What finally worked for my setup: I went series-parallel (two strings of two) with a Victron MPPT controller. Best of both worlds, and the controller handles the complexity. If you're using a basic PWM controller, series is simpler. If you've splashed out on MPPT, the hybrid approach gives you real-world advantages on a boat.

What controller are you planning?

❤️ Rusty Ranger
OldSailor
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#1486

@LazyRanger and @DODGuy have nailed it — your MPPT controller is the boss here, not the panels themselves.

For a narrowboat specifically, parallel tends to win because you're likely dealing with partial shading from the canal-side trees and your own cabin structure. Series configuration gets absolutely murdered by shade — one panel in shadow tanks the whole string's voltage. Parallel keeps each panel working independently, so you don't lose the lot when a cloud drifts over.

That said, four 400W Renogy panels in parallel will be absolutely chewing through whatever 48V MPPT you've got bolted to the saloon wall. Make sure it's actually rated for that input current, or you'll be watching smoke instead of sunset views.

What controller are you planning to run? That's genuinely where the answer lives.

👍 Marsh Hermit, Jock57, Forest Cruiser, Berlingo Solar

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