this post was submitted on 24 May 2026
12 points (100.0% liked)
Meshtastic
2360 readers
2 users here now
A community to discuss Meshtastic (https://meshtastic.org/docs/introduction)
Other mesh communities:
MeshCore: !Meshcore@feddit.org Reticulum: !Reticulum@mander.xyz
founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
My solar node sits under a projection where it gets sun in the morning but shade afterward.
Ah good idea. I had it full on south so maybe I try east of the house. See if it gets enough to charge and then shade. Thanks
Will that be enough during winter?
It was this past winter, but I'm at a pretty low latitude (~31.8°). The SenseCap Solar P1 has a huge 5w panel. I run a Meshcore repeater, also NRF52-based, under the same eaves with only a 1w panel. It stayed up all winter, too.
Yeah, that’s much closer to the equator than I am. While this would work for me in the summer it may not in the winter - when temperatures drop well below 0 degrees Celsius (making charging less effective) , and the sun does not shine for that long (shortening the charging time significantly).
Paradoxically, solar panels perform better in the cold , at least on MPPT controllers. It won't make a practical difference in your scenario but it's interesting. At least to geeks like me.
But I believe you shouldn’t charge batteries in very cold conditions (below -10C?)
Yeah, both Li-NMC and LiFePO4 can be damaged by charging when cell temps are below freezing. There is some anecdotal evidence that the very low C (current) rates we see with small panels could make it a non-issue. One of my nodes was up over last winter and froze a few times. I haven't observed any capacity reduction although TBF I didn't do any actual capacity tests.
In my campervan where I have a 380Ah LFP bank I use warming pads to keep the cells at human-comfortable temps.