Monocrystalline panels offer 18-22% efficiency and are the best solution for limited roof space since they produce more energy per square meter. Polycrystalline panels have slightly lower efficiency (15-17%) but are more affordable and excellent for larger areas like cabins or industrial buildings. Flexible panels are ideal for mobile applications – RVs, boats or temporary installations where weight and flexibility are critical.
Standard panels range from 100W to 550W, with a 400W panel typically occupying about 2 square meters. An average household consuming 4000-5000 kWh annually needs roughly 15-20 square meters of panel area for complete energy independence. When selecting wattage, always factor in a 20-30% reserve to account for seasonal variations and performance degradation over time.
PERC (Passivated Emitter and Rear Cell) technology has become the standard in quality panels as it boosts efficiency by 5-7% compared to conventional cells. Half-cut cells reduce energy losses and enable better performance in partial shade. Most manufacturers offer a 25-year power warranty with guaranteed degradation not exceeding 20%, which practically means the panel will still operate at 80% of nominal capacity after a quarter century.
The temperature coefficient indicates how much power a panel loses when heated – quality panels have a coefficient around -0.35%/°C. This means at 50°C the panel loses approximately 10% of power compared to the standard 25°C rating. Serbian climate with hot summers requires panels with the lowest possible temperature coefficient, as roof surface temperatures easily exceed 60°C during July and August.
A solar system isn't complete with just panels – you need an inverter (string or micro), charge controllers, batteries if you want autonomy, and mounting hardware. The inverter must be sized at 120-130% of total panel capacity for optimal operation. For off-grid cabin systems, definitely include LiFePO4 batteries with minimum capacity covering 2-3 days of consumption without sun.
In Serbia, the optimal tilt angle is 30-35 degrees year-round, or 45 degrees if winter production is a priority. The ideal orientation is south, but deviations up to 30 degrees toward southeast or southwest reduce production by only 3-5%. Avoid shade from chimneys, antennas or trees – even partial shading of one panel in a series string can cut the entire string's production in half.
We offer 9 products from 0 brands across 1 sellers. Prices range from 4,180 to 170,750 RSD.