I've started a wiki page on areas and test reports :
http://www.navitron.org.uk/pmwiki/pmwiki.php?n=SolarThermal.PanelAreaAndEfficiencyThat needs more work, but I need to clarify some things first.
I've put up the definitions of gross, aperture and absober area that are used by Fraunhofer ISE and the gross and aperture defintions for SPF. I can't find the definition of absorber area that SPF use.
The definitions are not the same, which may explain why the numbers from the two institutions differ.
Here are the numbers quoted by SPF and ISE for a selection of panels:
| Panel | | |
| Navitron SFB20 | 2.403 | 1.747 | 2.655 |
| AMK OPC-10 | 1.145 | 1.143 | 1.650 |
| Consol 22-47-1500 | 2.624 | 1.356 | 1.17 |
| Eco-nomical 20x47 (calculated) | 2.74 | 1.26 | 1.15 |
| Eco-nomical 18x58 | 2.100 | 1.706 | 1.451 |
| Xinwang ANK20x58 | 2.853 | 1.869 | 1.614 |
I've tried to choose ones that either we know something about or are similar to the nav 20x47 tested. This has only been somewhat successful.
Looking at the Fraunhofer test sheet (link below) for the economical 20x58x18 panel (the only one they got tested) we find some numbers that make sense. The area of the inside of 18 tubes 1.8m long does indeed come to the 1.706m2 calculated. It's easy to do the same sums for the 20x47 panel and get convincing aperture and absorber areas for that too. These agree with the ones quoted on eco-nomical's website:
http://www.eco-nomical.co.uk/SolarWaterProduct.htm no doubt because they've done the same sums.
However the SPF numbers are much harder to make sense of. One big problem when comparing panels is that nowhere in their report do they say how many tubes a panel has or what their diamter is. Without these numbers it's impossible to do the sums. However we can find some panels for which we do know the number of tubes and their sizes (although you have to be careful - eco-nomical got an 18-tube panel tested but now list,sell and quote areas for, a 20-tube panel - such things might apply to other tested panels too). The consol has 22 tubes. My understanding of the 47 and 58mm tubes is that they pretty much all have identical external dimensions so panels with same number and size of tube should have very similar (the same?) aperture and absorber areas.
Navitron quote "The 20 tube double-walled tube collector (47mm tubes) is 1760x1500x130mm (LxWxH)" in their FAQ. That suggests a gross area of 2.64m2. SPF say it is 1640mm*1470mm=2.4m2. SPF aren't including the pipe spigots. I guess Navitron are. You'd think that measuring the simple panel area was simple enough, but we already have a 9% discrepancy here.
Looking at the various aperture and absorber areas in the table above you can see that the numbers are in proportion for the 2 58mm panels (with 18 and 20 tubes respectively). Similarly the aperture areas for the consol and eco-nomical panels match up (although the absorber areas don't). However the Navitron numbers are completely different. The only explanation for this is that the SPF defintion for absorber area changes if the panel has a reflector:
The aperture area is the surface of the collector, through which non-concentrated sunlight enters. (tubular collectors without reflector: inner tubular diameter x length x number of tubes, with reflector: largest projected area of the collector)
Perhaps if you totted up the area of the reflectors+tubes on a navitron SFB20 you'd get 1.75m2 ? Anyone care to check?
The only other panel in the list where the absorber area is bigger than the aperture area is the AMK OPC panels so I've added that to the above table. The ratio of aperture to absorber is similar in both cases, but not exactly the same. That one has a reflector drawn and listed in the diagram, however the Navitron one doesn't. Did the tested panel have reflectors fitted? I guess it did but they have been missed off the diagram (which is rather slapdash).
Now I haven't even got on to stuff about incident angles and the efficiency co-efficients but this post is long enough already and it's bedtime(!) so I'll stop now.
My conclusion from the above is that Fraunhofer write much better reports than SPF - they make sense, definitions are given, details are recorded. Actual logged data is tagged on the end, and paicture of the actual panel under test is included. However they don't put them up on their site, and I can't see it on economical's either. So I've put a copy here for people who wish to compare reporting styles:
http://wookware.org/solar/economical_test_report.pdfThe thing I haven't worked out yet is how to normalise the SPF Nav SFB20 data for what we can all understand as a sensible definition of aperture area (i.e. ignoring the reflectors), and recalculate the efficiency coefficients. I don't think it's very hard, but it may be difficult without the original data. Any stat's gurus here?
Sorry if this is a bit rambling, but there is definately an issue here it would be good to properly understand so we can do meaningful sums.