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  • Product Certificates
    Solar
0 Suppliers

Famex Farchoukh GmbH was founded 1979 and has developed into a competent internationally recognised company. Main tasks are projecting, producing of electrical components in order to meet local and international requirements as well as safe commissioning. Accesoiries for Overhead Line Materials, entire Solar Systems, Grounding Materials and ohers are part of the Famex product range

  • MPPT Charge Controller
  • Germany
  • Germany

On April 1, 2018, Sharp Corporation transferred a part of its energy solution business to Sharp Energy Solutions Corporation (SESJ), a wholly owned subsidiary dedicated to the category, allowing more flexibility to meet customer needs with accuracy and promptitude, and covering every relevant activity, from development and marketing to installation and after-sales service, in Japan and abroad. As an example in the area of residential homes, our [...]

  • MPPT Charge Controller
  • Germany
  • Germany

Partnering with a dense network of selected solar craftspeople and specialised distributors, we deliver quality not only of our products but also of our services. From the first conversation to dispatch from our logistics center we take care to deliver precise and customerdriven performance. Frictionless cooperation is part of our quality ethos. Commitment, reliability and competence are central elements of our success. We nurture business [...]

  • PWM Regulator
  • Germany
  • Germany

ZSD Solar is your reliable and professional partner when it comes to photovoltaic systems. With our many years of experience, we offer you from Aurich via Emsbüren, Nordhorn, Rheine, Steinfurt, Borken, Münster, Osnabrück to Dülmen, Recklinghausen, Dorsten and Bottrop, as well as excellent service for everything to do with your new solar system: from the first consultation to the detailed planning through to professional installation by our [...]

  • Series Voltage Regulators
  • Germany
  • Germany

TAGEX is Europe’s market leader in the field of rubber tracks for mini-excavators, loaders, carriers and special machinery. We are an OEM for TEREX (formerly Schaeff) and manufacturers and dealers around the world trust in the DRB rubber track. We also develop bespoke rubber tracks for individual requirements. Our DRB excavator tracks have undergone and complete overhaul and numerous details have been improved. Excavator tracks from TAGEX [...]

  • MPPT Charge Controller
  • Germany
  • Germany

Within just a few years, Tecinnova International has developed into a leading international manufacturer and supplier of products and solutions for generating environmentally friendly energy, and we continue to grow. Against the background of our international orientation and our decentralized organizational structure, it is important that none of our employees lose sight of the Tecinnova spirit .

  • PWM Regulator
  • Germany
  • Germany

We manufacture directly at our German site in Chemnitz – with a highly qualified, well-practised team. Because: It is from here that we can best fulfil our own standards in respect of quality, timeliness and ability to deliver. On the latest highly automated assembly lines, and with a nominal production plant manufacturing capacity of 400 MWp.

  • PWM Regulator
  • Germany
  • Germany

Die TrippleZ GmbH hat sich auf das Repowering von Solarparks und auf die Verwertung und Entsorgung von gebrauchten PV Komponenten spezialisiert, was bedeutet, dass die seit 8 bis 10 Jahren genutzten Module deinstalliert, transportgerecht auf Paletten am Solarpark gepackt und anschließend in unser Lager nach Hilden transportiert werden.

 

  • PWM Regulator
  • Germany
  • Germany

Jurawatt - your company based in Hilpoltstein. Our strength: innovative potential and comprehensive know-how. By working with JvG Thoma GmbH, we can draw on more than 30 years of experience in the solar industry.

  • PWM Regulator
  • Germany
  • Germany

IBC SOLAR offers tailor-made solutions ranging from individual solar panels to complete PV systems. For more than 39 years, IBC SOLAR has continually shaped the development of solar energy as a source of regenerative energy. This German company with its traditional background is one of the pioneers in the field of solar technology and one of the international leaders in the field of energy production from sunlight. IBC SOLAR is a complete solar [...]

  • PWM Regulator
  • Germany
  • Germany

Modern solar technology is based mainly on the work of a small number of companies and individuals and their relentless work in research and experimentation towards the goal of clean and sustainable energy for future generations. Engcotec, founded in 1987 by Engineer Mr. Samak, specialized in renewable energies, and especially in photovoltaics. Today, after more than two decades of international experience, Engcotec has built up a successful and [...]

  • Charge Controllers
  • Germany
  • Germany

Germany

What is Solar Energy in Germany?

Germany, despite being a sun-drenched country has been considered as one of the highest solar power outputs around the world and still possesses the most advanced and latest research about solar energy and has many new industry actors. Moreover, they’re expecting for the second wave of solar power expansion, which will soon bring success and progress for the solar technology’s full systemic integration.

For several years, Germany has been considered as the world’s top PV installer among other countries. At the end of the year 2016, Germany managed to build a total installed solar power capacity of 41.3 gigawatts (GW) which was behind China’s solar capacity.

Most solar power in Germany exclusively consists of photovoltaics (PV) systems only. Germany has only a little interest in concentrated solar power (CSP) for it does not use photovoltaics and this solar technology requires much higher solar insolation as compared to the PV system. However, there is still an experimental CSP-plant with 1.5 MW capacity which is being used solely for on-site engineering purposes only rather than for commercial electricity/power generation. This concentrated solar power is called the “Jülich Solar Tower” that is owned by the German Aerospace Center.

Moreover, in 2014, Germany managed to install about 1.5 million photovoltaic systems across the country which are ranging from small rooftop solar power systems to medium commercial and large utility-scale solar plants and farms. The largest solar farms of Germany are located in Neuhardenberg, Templin and Meuro with solar capacities of over 100 MW. Moreover, these PV technologies were accounted for an estimated 6.2 to 6.9 percent of Germany’s net electricity generation in the year 2016.

However, new installations of photovoltaic systems have slowed down steadily since the beginning of the year 2011. Also, it was estimated in the year 2017 that over 70 percent of the employment in the solar industry of the country have been lost in recent years. Solar power in Germany has gone through rough times since it has been started in the wake of Germany’s Renewable Energy Act in the year 2000. However, German companies quickly loomed to global leadership in solar power technology before a collapse in the solar industry happen and some of the companies were forced to hold their businesses.

Proponents from the Photovoltaic industry blamed the government for its lack of commitment in the said industry, while others point out that the loss of jobs in the solar sector is due to financial burden that was associated with the fast-paced launching and manufacturing of photovoltaics, which in their perspective was very unsustainable to the transition of renewable energies.

With all of these, still, the official governmental goal of Germany is to continuously improve and increase the contribution of renewable energy to the country’s overall electricity generation and consumption. By 2020, Germany is aiming for a long-term minimum target of 35 percent capacity, 50 percent by 2030 and around 80 percent power capacity by the end of 2050.

Currently, the country is significantly producing more electricity at specific times with high solar irradiation than the country’s needs, slowing down spot-market prices and exporting the country’s electricity surplus to nearby countries. In 2014, the record of exported electricity surplus reached almost 34 TWh. The decline of spot-prices in the market may raise the electricity prices for retail customers, as the expansion of the guaranteed feed-in tariff and spot-price increases as well.

As the combined share of fluctuating wind and solar energy is nearly achieving 17 percent of the national electricity mix, energy issues and problems are also being prevented and others becoming more manageable. This is because of the electrical grid adaptation, new grid-storage capacity construction, reduction of fossil fuels, altering of nuclear power plants and constructing a new generation of combined heat and power plants. Today, nuclear power and brown coal are the cheapest suppliers of electricity in Germany.

Charge Controllers used for below projects in Germany

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Charge Controllers

Wholesale Solar Charge Controllers Suppliers

Sometimes called “Solar Regulators“, a solar charge controller is basically a device that controls voltage or current that charges the battery so that electric cells do not get overcharged. A charge controller controls the voltage and current coming from the solar panels and move to the electric cell. 

Roughly, 12V boards or panels generate around 16 to 20V, and without any regulation, the voltage will damage the electric cells through overcharging. Usually, electric storage devices need nearly 14 to 14.5V to get fully charged. The solar charge controllers are available in different features, sizes, and costs. The range of charge controllers starts from 4.5A, 60 to 80A.   

Why Charge Controllers for PV Systems?

  • To protect the battery (12V) from overcharging
  • To minimize system maintenance and increase the battery life
  • To indicate auto-charge
  • To monitor the reverse current flow.

Solar power systems mostly use 12V batteries. Solar panels can carry more voltage than required to charge the battery. Charge controllers can keep the voltage of the electronic storage at the optimum level. 

This way, solar systems work at their best efficiency level. By running higher voltage in the wires from the solar panels to the charge controller, power transmission through the wires is reduced.

Types of Solar Charge Controllers

There are three main types of solar charge controllers:

  • Simple 1 or 2 Controls: This type of charge controller has shunt transistors to control the voltage in one or two steps. The controller regulates the voltage in the solar panel after reaching a certain point.
  • Maximum Power Point Tracking (MPPT): The MPPT solar charge controller identifies the best working voltage and amperage of solar panels and matches that with the electric cell bank. The outcome is additional 10-30% more power output than other controllers.
  • PWM (Pulse Width Modulated): These are the conventional types of charge controllers and are currently considered as the industry standard.

Get the Best Quality Solar Regulator from SolarFeeds

As a multiple wholesale vendor eCommerce marketplaces, our website lists a wide range of reputable brands of Solar PWM/MPPT Charge Controllers from manufacturers. These charge controllers perfectly work as electronic DC-to-DC converters that optimize the match between the solar array (PV panels), the battery bank, or the utility grid. 

The charge controllers convert a higher voltage DC output from solar panels into the lower voltage needed to charge batteries. 

You can also buy wholesale multifunction solar charge controllers, which are based on Microcontroller technology. These multifunction solar charge controllers have become popular for their excellent performances. They are used to convert regular UPS/inverters into a Solar power Conditioning Unit (PCU).

Check out our website for various wholesale solar charge controller manufacturers, and buy them in bulk at a low cost. 

You can get long-term benefits from buying wholesale solar charge controllers directly from manufacturers for expanding your business and increasing revenues. Drop us an email with your questions at info@solarfeeds.com.

Distributors

Solar Products Distributors

Distributors are those companies working as big warehouses that served as the middlemen between the consumer/customer and the manufacturer. Typically, in distribution, a company is handling the sourcing, stocking and logistics but nowadays they are also helping manufacturers in product designing and solving other business conflicts. 

Aside from other industries, distributors also play a vital role in the solar industry. Solar distributors become long-term partners of solar manufacturing companies and even solar contractors. They are not only serving as warehouse facilities but partners that also provide strategic solutions to help solar companies achieve their desired outcomes. Solar distributors assist solar manufacturing companies by storing. handling and shipping their solar products to their buyers. On the other hand, they help solar contractor companies in outsourcing high-quality solar products. 

These solar distributors are the ones who deal with homeowners who want to go solar, businesses that work with the solar industry and solar installers who offer solar system services to both residential and commercial customers. But on top of that, the solar distributor’s main role is to maintain its commitment to outsourcing and handling high-quality products and delivering them to customers at a good value. 

Up to these days, many solar distributors have been operating and helping many solar companies in distributing their products. So, if you are looking for the most trusted and reliable solar distributor, you can easily find one by checking out solar outsourcing companies that provide easy access to reliable information, news, data and a list of solar suppliers and distributors near you.

Germany

What is Solar Energy in Germany?

Germany, despite being a sun-drenched country has been considered as one of the highest solar power outputs around the world and still possesses the most advanced and latest research about solar energy and has many new industry actors. Moreover, they’re expecting for the second wave of solar power expansion, which will soon bring success and progress for the solar technology’s full systemic integration.

For several years, Germany has been considered as the world’s top PV installer among other countries. At the end of the year 2016, Germany managed to build a total installed solar power capacity of 41.3 gigawatts (GW) which was behind China’s solar capacity.

Most solar power in Germany exclusively consists of photovoltaics (PV) systems only. Germany has only a little interest in concentrated solar power (CSP) for it does not use photovoltaics and this solar technology requires much higher solar insolation as compared to the PV system. However, there is still an experimental CSP-plant with 1.5 MW capacity which is being used solely for on-site engineering purposes only rather than for commercial electricity/power generation. This concentrated solar power is called the “Jülich Solar Tower” that is owned by the German Aerospace Center.

Moreover, in 2014, Germany managed to install about 1.5 million photovoltaic systems across the country which are ranging from small rooftop solar power systems to medium commercial and large utility-scale solar plants and farms. The largest solar farms of Germany are located in Neuhardenberg, Templin and Meuro with solar capacities of over 100 MW. Moreover, these PV technologies were accounted for an estimated 6.2 to 6.9 percent of Germany’s net electricity generation in the year 2016.

However, new installations of photovoltaic systems have slowed down steadily since the beginning of the year 2011. Also, it was estimated in the year 2017 that over 70 percent of the employment in the solar industry of the country have been lost in recent years. Solar power in Germany has gone through rough times since it has been started in the wake of Germany’s Renewable Energy Act in the year 2000. However, German companies quickly loomed to global leadership in solar power technology before a collapse in the solar industry happen and some of the companies were forced to hold their businesses.

Proponents from the Photovoltaic industry blamed the government for its lack of commitment in the said industry, while others point out that the loss of jobs in the solar sector is due to financial burden that was associated with the fast-paced launching and manufacturing of photovoltaics, which in their perspective was very unsustainable to the transition of renewable energies.

With all of these, still, the official governmental goal of Germany is to continuously improve and increase the contribution of renewable energy to the country’s overall electricity generation and consumption. By 2020, Germany is aiming for a long-term minimum target of 35 percent capacity, 50 percent by 2030 and around 80 percent power capacity by the end of 2050.

Currently, the country is significantly producing more electricity at specific times with high solar irradiation than the country’s needs, slowing down spot-market prices and exporting the country’s electricity surplus to nearby countries. In 2014, the record of exported electricity surplus reached almost 34 TWh. The decline of spot-prices in the market may raise the electricity prices for retail customers, as the expansion of the guaranteed feed-in tariff and spot-price increases as well.

As the combined share of fluctuating wind and solar energy is nearly achieving 17 percent of the national electricity mix, energy issues and problems are also being prevented and others becoming more manageable. This is because of the electrical grid adaptation, new grid-storage capacity construction, reduction of fossil fuels, altering of nuclear power plants and constructing a new generation of combined heat and power plants. Today, nuclear power and brown coal are the cheapest suppliers of electricity in Germany.

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