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โก Charge Smarter, Live Freer โ Power Your Journey with SOLPERK!
The SOLPERK 8A 12V Solar Charge Controller is a compact, IP67 waterproof PWM regulator designed for 12V solar panels and batteries including Gel, AGM, Lead-Acid, and LiFePO4 types. Featuring an intelligent LED display and six safety protections, it ensures efficient, safe charging with zero battery drain at night. Ideal for RVs, boats, and cars, it offers easy installation with an SAE connector and comes backed by a one-year warranty and lifetime support.
















| ASIN | B0D3HR38QC |
| Best Sellers Rank | #35,204 in Patio, Lawn & Garden ( See Top 100 in Patio, Lawn & Garden ) #14 in Renewable Energy Controllers |
| Brand | SOLPERK |
| Brand Name | SOLPERK |
| Color | Black |
| Customer Reviews | 4.3 out of 5 stars 320 Reviews |
| Display Type | LED |
| EU Spare Part Availability Duration | 1 Years |
| Included Components | 1*8A 12V Solar Charge Controller |
| Item Weight | 0.12 Kilograms |
| Manufacturer | SOLPERK |
| Material | Plastic |
| Material Type | Plastic |
| Model | 001 |
| Part Number | 001 |
| Smart Home Compatibility | Not Smart Home Compatible |
| Voltage | 12 Volts |
P**R
Nice and compact
Hi, this charge controller seems to work well and seems very well made. I think it is good value for the money. Simple and straight forward. I bought it to use with a 3.5 watt coleman solar battery maintainer which runs ok without a charge controller but.im.not sure if it adjusts for AGM batteries. This charger controller is made to adjust and it work fi e with the panel. The power consumption is good, because it has a diode to protect back flow of current. I havent checked it with a meter, but it is holding my battery at a good charge. The coleman solar maintainer also has a diode. One question i have is that the directions say to hook the charge controller up to the solar panel first and then the battery. I have contacted them to ask if there is an internal protection for that. I assume there is. Because most charge controllers need to be hooked to the battery first and then the panel. So i did it the safe way until i hear back from them. i will update if i get any more information. Update : i heard back from solperk and they explained it was okay to hook up the panel to the controller first. Heres what they said. Hi, For a 12V8A controller, it doesn't matter if you connect the battery or the solar panel first. You read elsewhere that connecting the batteries first is because their controllers are powered by batteries, ours uses solar panels for power, so both are fine. Also the controller will automatically recognize between lead acid, AGM, or Lithium Iron Phosphate batteries and adjust itself so please feel free to use it. Have a nice day. SOLPERK SERVICE
D**N
Plug and play.
Works great.
B**D
Ok
Working ok. Had some configuration issues that SOLPERK helped correct. Stood behind their product too.
K**O
Great
Works just as described even used it on a boat for charging batteries through solar panels.
A**R
Solar charge controller
Works as expected
A**R
Charge controller was not charging and yet the display showed it was charging
Additional review. I just completed an expedition style sailboat race, and this change controller almost caused me to drop out. I had no power to charge anything on the boat, so I would have to wait at checkpoints to recharge my devices. This was significant, because I could only briefly turn on my navigation devices when I needed to recheck my heading. It was pitch black out there. What happened? The solar panel failed, possibly during the drive to Florida. I'm not sure. I tested the power before I left, and things were going OK - I could easily leave the navigation lights on all night and only lose around .7V before morning. Things charged up OK. The first day on the challenge race, we charged electronics, including a small Bluetooth speaker, and watched the annoying flashing red/green LEDs showing the battery was charged. I thought everything was OK. However, within 15 minutes after turning on the LED navigation lights (nothing else was connected at this time), we lost all nav lighting. The breaker panel has a voltmeter, and it didn't display anything. I thought at first there was a wiring fault, but using a flashlight during troubleshooting, things looked OK. The wiring is very basic. After about 30 minutes, I rechecked the voltage, which read about 10V. We fortunately had red/green/white headlamps that we strapped on the rigging to get us through the following nights, but when morning came, I checked the solar panel. The open circuit voltage rapidly fluctuated between 7V and 17V, but open circuit amps displayed a few mA. It appears the panel had not been producing any charge the following day, but the dang charge controller is just flashing away reporting everything was OK. Let me say that when you have a charge controller with two LEDs (red for charging and green for charged), and the lights rapidly flash red and green when it's charged (and not a solid green you'd expect), it's safe to presume crummy engineering. I was tipped off before I left on the trip, and like the phrase "I have a bad feeling about this" from Star Wars, I did have a bad feeling about this charge controller but used it anyway. I wholeheartedly DO NOT RECOMMEND THIS. I did get a replacement charge controller before I left, and it behaved the same way, so I was HOPING things were OK. That wasn't the case. The instructions are not clear and are at least partly incorrect. Step 2 says to connect the solar panel and the controller, and "both indicator lights on the controller light up **at the same time.**" I'm thinking this reads as if they are both on and don't flash. Actually, the LEDs flash rapidly between green and red, and I was concerned something was going to blow up. Step 3 says to connect the batter from the controller to the battery, and the "only the CHARGING light on the controller is on." After the battery was attached, the controller continued flashing rapidly about another 1-1/2 minutes, so I'm thinking, "What the heck is it doing?" FINALLY, the light stays red. There is a 20 watt solar panel and a 20 A-Hr battery, so it charges up all day Saturday and it still charging at around 2:30 PM Sunday. I'm wondering how long this will go on for, and then suddenly the alternating red and green lights come on before my eyes. Step 4 says "both lights on the controller light up again" when the battery is fully charged at 14.2V, and the picture shows both red and green LEDs lit up, but the voltage was only around 13.4V. I have no idea if this is working correctly or not.
S**S
Works correctly after figuring out wires were backwards from the factory..
I did get it to work, as others have said, the wires are backwards. On the solar panel side, I had to use an adapter that flips the connector to match the charge controller, I only had one of those adapters...on the battery side, I just plugged it in, knowing the polarity is backwards, I then connected the black wire side to positive battery terminal, and red wire to ground battery terminal. Then everything worked properly. I know that it is not correct and a potential hazard if someone else not knowing was messing with the wires. I'm the only person that will ever disconnect and or reconnect so I see no issue in my case. So yes if it seems like it's not working, you might have got one from the batch that was wired backwards from what I read from other reviews on here.
S**.
Fit
Straight out of package fit comes with adapter to reverse connector
S**N
It really does work
Works very well, water proof. Plug it in and play
T**Y
Does it work ?
Disappointed not sure if even works shows still charging on a fully charged battery
C**N
tres bien
fait la job
L**R
Does the job
Works fine for a battery maintainer
S**T
Excellent product
Excellent product
Trustpilot
1 month ago
2 months ago