I'm planning to install solar on my narrowboat and I'm trying to decide between a flat installation and a tilted setup. My boat's based on the Grand Union Canal near Birmingham, and I'm looking at this primarily for emergency backup power rather than full off-grid living — though I'd like to minimise shore power usage during summer months.
I've got space on the cabin roof, but it's quite limited. A flat array would obviously fit more panels and look neater, whereas a tilted frame would take up more footprint but potentially generate more throughout the year.
The main concerns I have are:
Weather & maintenance — narrowboats get battered by the elements. Tilted frames seem like they'd collect debris and moss more readily, and I'm not keen on crawling about on the roof constantly. How often would I realistically need to clean a tilted array?
Structural weight — my boat's already got a full water tank and batteries. Does anyone know what the actual load difference is between, say, 2kW flat vs 2kW tilted?
Practical charging — I've got a Victron Smartsolar 100/30 controller already. Would the extra generation from tilting genuinely offset the maintenance hassle for UK latitudes?
I'm thinking 2-3kW system alongside a small wind turbine if space permits. Has anyone got experience with tilt angles on boats, or gone purely flat and regretted it? Keen to hear what's worked in practice rather than theory.
Cheers for any insights.