I have been using CIGS panels daily for 4 years for RV - panels are ground deployed and have been stepped on by many cows - blown and banged around by wind etc and have been durable / reliable - my panels made by MIA solar 17 inches wide and about 7 ft long - have 6 x 125watt that i store /transport rolled in a plastic 55gallon barrel cut to 4 inches taller than panel width - has enough extra space in center of panels rolled for 7 gallon water jug
What's,the long-term dropoff been? Still seeing similar output to new? Has it gone down a little or a lot? The website says they only lose 5w over 3 years but, well, they would say that.
Thanks, I bought 2 from the link. They will work great for augmenting my fixed solar array. In the winter, there is never enough sun so, on cloudy days/ weeks, I can quickly lay 2 of these on the ground and tie in using the MC4 connectors. I also have a few solar generators (my "gold" investment) to charge, and these solar panels (my other gold investment) are lite and portable like the solar generators. I think these panels will last 20 years because I am not leaving them out in the sun for 20 years - I only need to roll them out to charge the solar generator, once that is done, I will roll them back up. As for the price, there are expensive thin film panels out there so this compares to other similar products. I can justify the price because the power to weight ratio is very high, and I need portable solar panels to be easy to handle and not bulky. The not bulky part is important to me - the neighbor's tree drops a branch on my fixed array, smashing it, lucky (or planning) I have 400 watts of panels rolled up in the basement, ready to go.
Agree, great video. I recently installed a single 100 Watt stick-on CIGS panel on the roof of my Bushwhacker 12 SK on the driver's side and it clears the AC vent pipes and power ceiling vent. I plan on installing a second one on the camp side if I need to. My older EchoFlow River Pro wouldn't work with the panel's voltage, but the EchoFlow River 2 would work with it as you noted in your video and solar battery packs not all being the same with the higher voltage of the panel. The panel adheres very well to the teardrop's roof and removal will be a significant challenge as it really sticks to things. Need two people to do a good job. I also put some Gorilla Patch & seal tape along the leading edge and a couple of points on the panel and used it to hold down the wires as well. I'll know more after my next trip on well it does in the mix of things. I have a 200 AH AGM and a 40 Amp MPPT controller that it connects into. It mostly will just run the built-in fridge and keeping a float charge on the battery when I'm not camping in it. I also have 400 Watt portable panels that I can deploy as needed.
When plugging into a power station you never want to go over the voltage limit of the unit or you could fry it. The amps and wattage don’t matter because the charge controller will regulate that, you just never want to go over on the voltage. So make sure the open circuit voltage of the panel is lower than the max input of the unit you’re plugging it into.
More expensive and much bigger than other commercially available 200 watt flexible panels. Also, maximum fuse rating limits use of parallel strings to eliminate needs for NEC required fuses. Relatively high Voc means potentially more expensive MPPT controllers downstream. The one main benefit is the lower weight.
Great video, Jeremy! I imagine other solar panel companies will jumping on this band wagon! I have a Tab 400 teardrop camper and I’d have to pass on these, for lack of storage. I have two Bluetti units with panels, but I bet a lot of people will like these. Especially at their home. Maybe I need to rethink this 🤔 they would be nice and light to put on a drain on your roof. Hmmm!
Thank you for reviewing the exact two I was considering purchasing. The CIGS are really nice. But the warranty isn’t great and you would have to be really careful with them so as to not lose them to the wind or scratched due to twigs, sleet or hail. Perhaps building a frame for the CIGS using a glass cover may help as well. Thanks for the detailed review!
Hobotech scratched one of these up, walked on it, drove a quad bike on it and SHOT it, and it still put out about 160, as opposed to an undamaged one doing 180
I just saw this technology the other day on TH-cam. And my first thought was this would be perfect for a retractable awnings on the side of an RV or on one of those retractable awnings for your porch at home.
Sadly they only have an 18 month warranty. That does not say much for longevity, and at $529.00 per panel is a lot for such a short time of protection.
How about flex solar in cylindrical shape that could turn 360 degrees like wind vanes? Cylindrical means like a "can" shape. As wind vane all sides will be heated.
Then the panel will produce Mach less power because over half of it will always be in a shadow. It would be cool-looking but it'd be probably still more efficient to build a solar tracker even though it consumes power to move.
Wow, over $500 for one 200w. Flexible and lightweight is nice, good if you're using it in various places like that, but if you're securing them permanently somewhere, definitely worth getting something else.
This is wrong I would never get any other panels for any application in any situation. These will outlast those old outdated mono crystalline panels, both in durability, and an overall wattage output because of the low light performance. Sure you think you might save a couple hundred bucks, but in the long run it will cost you more both in terms of financially, and also in headache and durability
I have a rounded wooden RV roof, it would be good for that application if not for my two folding 100W Jakery panels I already bought. Thank you for sharing!
its seems to have abit of a low energy output in reguards to its size being 2 metres and 20 centimeters when compared with similar sized panells ,that are the rigid panels,i guess there is the weight ,vs output thing
what are the specific connectors you're using to connect the solar panels to each other and to the power station? I'm considering buying a flexible 100W solar panel x2 and the bougeRV power station, but before then I'd like to try to buy all the needed cables ahead of time, if possible.
Thin flexible panels are only useful if they are not in use all the time. They are handy to have as backup if they are mostly in storage, but they are kind of expensive for that. Great for camping now and then and maybe power outages. They travel well because they are light. In hot sun that plastic shit will break down in a year or less.
Bravo.....flexible........the only problem ........application........can't screw.......sticky glue on back......and how do u remove if panel go bad......no answer........cheers
Will the heat from the body it sticks (car) kill the panel? And reduce the output. Many flex panels in the past have had such problems. Which causes the panel doesn't last long.
Another design a panel of solar inside a parabolic silver that in turn turns 360 degrees like a wind vane. Parabolic like a DISC used in Disc-TV. PARABOLIC design increases energy 100 percent. But you must store the energy inside a solar generator. Or use parabolic solar energy directly to run appliances.
Thanks for the excellent review. Could you please share the name of the scale you are you using? I've been looking for a good scale with a detachable display for a very long time. Greetings from Germany!
@@JeremiahMcintosh CIGS-panels are VERY GOOD for artificial lighting-energy production. I tested this yesterday in my house with my new 2/3-W CIGS-panels: they produce about 1.5 Volts in the near of a 20W Halogen-bulb and about 1.2 A of energy (1.8 Watts). Which is enough o power a 1V-to-5-V-USB Powerconverter. to store that energy. My panel can produce about 4-5 Volts under a direct light of a 20 W Halogen-bulb. It works 24/7 in indoors! You can use and produce energy with CIGS-panels with ANY lights, with LEDs, with old lightbulbs and even with other lightsources.
I love your videos! Can I have more details about the panels?And what is the main the difference between using some smaller power panels and one panel that have same power as the total of smaller one's?
If you use multiple smaller panels you will have to run then either in series which doubles the voltage or parallel which doubles the amperage but make sure you don’t go over the voltage that your power station will except or you can burn it out. Some units also have a low amperage input so sometimes you’re limited with how many you can run in parallel as well to get the full output from multiple panels. Ideally, you would want to get panels that have close to the voltage and amperage output that your unit will accept.
Please test based on temperature. Panel temperature really makes a difference. The advantage of hard panels is that you can leave an air gap below them for cooling to improve efficiency.
In theory a CIGS-panel which is not glued on a foil only will last ~100-200 years (not limited to 20 years like a normal silicium-based solarcell based tech). For a foil-CIGS-panel it will die quicker because Sun will destroy the foil much faster. See? So it has nothing to do with the "CIGS"-technology, but rather how thick your material is. iF the foil is very thick it will also last longer. This is the price you pay for a much lighter CIGS-panel. Because typically such foil is very, very lightweight! My CIGS aren´t glued on foil, thus it will last until the year 2100 is over. lol
That isn´t possible as CIGS is allready including 3 different solarcells (Green/Blue and a red-light collecting one) into one single solarcell. But Bi-facial uses standard, old silicium-cells. Which can break. Which are HEAVY in weight. And which are BAD at shading-behaviour.
Looks sexy and minimalist but from almost all solar panels experts. Flexibles really sucks in dissipating heat which degrade their life cycle or lower output within a short period of time. Of course, could have them as disposable contact lenses, if they're cheap enough. Tough choice which way to go for RV systems 😢.
I heard flexibile solar panels don't last nearly as long as the hard ones, and that they are a fire hazard from over heating too. Have they improved them them yet? I just love how light weight they are!
Pretty impressive all said and done, and noticed despite the lower efficiency, the size is similar to the bluetti portable. The durability of the coating is concern though, especially since I plan on using it on a roof top tent
Been thinking about making a frame for these with carbon fiber tubes, and having the mount points for the grommets to make a larger array with 2x200w panels, keeping the carbon fiber tubes in the center for storage, and making a radiused container for the panels to slip into to protect from damage when not in use. We have a need for some electric when we lose grid power, and having 400-800w of power that can be stowed away nice and small, or even moved easily would be really useful, could run the refrigerators indefinitely and provide basic telecoms power as well as lighting. Would love to see costs come down on these cause at $500 for 200w is abut out of my budget, I have 2 100w panels with a hinge and controller/battery already that can do the minimum to keep some items functional for 12h but wouldn't make it till the sun came back up.
Just like your ebike hill test is much too thorough. Wait, too thorough is impossible. You answered many questions. Great intelligent, common sense testing. Would two of these panels be enough to charge an ebike and keep it charged if you were living off grid in an emergency?
If it was sunny one 200w would be enough if using a 2amp charger for your Ebike but but you would still have to go through a power station to convert it to Ac.
Not a fan of the dimensions of these panels. Would rather see these squared up a bit , something like 54x43 I feel would more useful for mounting on an rv which I see as the main market for flexible panels.
Why not a damned word about the heat output from these in contact with surfaces? Other flat/ flex panels have caught things on fire in extreme cases, so why avoid discussing that factor on these?
This company really chose a great name. Bouge basically means snooty arsehole, someone who is bougey is one who sets themselves apart from others by overtly displaying opulence. Smart name choice.
They might as well have named their company SODRA. (Show Off Douchey Rich Asshole). The term Bogey is in every case an insult, not a badge of honour the way being called OCD, or a nerd has become. If someone calls you Bouge or bougey, it's a criticism, not just a friendly observation or compliment. Type "Let them eat cake" into google and see where the word originates.
Quiet optimistic review, why are these expensive flex panels always under performing? On top of that ,their life cycle is less than half of glass panels. I would be careful with the bending of them , even more as they get older and brittle due to UV detoriation
The biggest drawback to these panels is their price and lifespan. It will only take about 6 months of throwing them around to destroy the clear film. At 3x the cost of large panels it’s still not a good buy.
I bought CIGS panels 5 years ago. 230w 75v. It's far better that the usual poly on mono panels giving up to 26% better efficiency. Price is higher almost double... But if space is an issue its the way to go... If you want to protect these panels for a long time... Build an aluminium frame with glass and stick it. Or fix it to whatever. The sticky protective film perish over time. But perhaps things changed over the last few years. Do some homework in the history of these CIGS panels they have been around some time
One thing you need to know about panels) electricity is wattage is volts time amps. Telling me wattage doesn't tell me how well they work. A 12v batti should charge at 14v. A 14v charge at noon is a lame panel. It will only charge decent at peak sun. A 20v panel will charge most of the day. How many amps is how fast it will charge. Wattage means nothing as the panel may not produce much if it only works good for 3 hours of the day.
Over 500.00 for a 200w panel. Lol 🤣. I'll stick with 139.00 for 2 100w panels. It costs me less than 500. for my 400w system to charge my solar chargers and it's all plug and play
But, can you test and report how "these things" perform over the years? Or are you simply " gilding the lilly" and making them seem better than they actually are? Can they give us 25 YEARS of performance? Or 20 minutes?
Wait until you see the video I’m working on now ,you’ll be impressed! I tortured the 100w panel including drilling holes in it and didn’t loose much performance. Check out my instagram reel to see a preview reel.
Ridiculous, the size is way too big for the low 200watt output. Good they're flexible but most setups, especially for a van takes up way too much roof real estate. 🤔
The CIGS cells *are* less efficient compared to the monocrystalline solar cells. The chief issue(s) are overall efficiency and long-term durability - with the CIGS cells being better…
Not worth the added cost to me given all the downsides. Even though the durability is quite impressive, I’m not abusing my panels enough for it to be worth the upgrade.
Solar seems to be getting better every day!
I have been using CIGS panels daily for 4 years for RV -
panels are ground deployed and have been stepped on by many cows - blown and banged around by wind etc and have been durable / reliable -
my panels made by MIA solar 17 inches wide and about 7 ft long -
have 6 x 125watt that i store /transport rolled in a plastic 55gallon barrel cut to 4 inches taller than panel width - has enough extra space in center of panels rolled for 7 gallon water jug
What's,the long-term dropoff been? Still seeing similar output to new? Has it gone down a little or a lot? The website says they only lose 5w over 3 years but, well, they would say that.
Thanks, I bought 2 from the link. They will work great for augmenting my fixed solar array. In the winter, there is never enough sun so, on cloudy days/ weeks, I can quickly lay 2 of these on the ground and tie in using the MC4 connectors. I also have a few solar generators (my "gold" investment) to charge, and these solar panels (my other gold investment) are lite and portable like the solar generators. I think these panels will last 20 years because I am not leaving them out in the sun for 20 years - I only need to roll them out to charge the solar generator, once that is done, I will roll them back up. As for the price, there are expensive thin film panels out there so this compares to other similar products. I can justify the price because the power to weight ratio is very high, and I need portable solar panels to be easy to handle and not bulky. The not bulky part is important to me - the neighbor's tree drops a branch on my fixed array, smashing it, lucky (or planning) I have 400 watts of panels rolled up in the basement, ready to go.
Thanks!
Thank you so much for the Super Thanks! It’s greatly appreciated!!
More air flow would boost output too, keeping them cool really helps!
Agree, great video. I recently installed a single 100 Watt stick-on CIGS panel on the roof of my Bushwhacker 12 SK on the driver's side and it clears the AC vent pipes and power ceiling vent. I plan on installing a second one on the camp side if I need to. My older EchoFlow River Pro wouldn't work with the panel's voltage, but the EchoFlow River 2 would work with it as you noted in your video and solar battery packs not all being the same with the higher voltage of the panel. The panel adheres very well to the teardrop's roof and removal will be a significant challenge as it really sticks to things. Need two people to do a good job. I also put some Gorilla Patch & seal tape along the leading edge and a couple of points on the panel and used it to hold down the wires as well. I'll know more after my next trip on well it does in the mix of things. I have a 200 AH AGM and a 40 Amp MPPT controller that it connects into. It mostly will just run the built-in fridge and keeping a float charge on the battery when I'm not camping in it. I also have 400 Watt portable panels that I can deploy as needed.
Could you explain why others are more concerned about current then Watts
When plugging into a power station you never want to go over the voltage limit of the unit or you could fry it. The amps and wattage don’t matter because the charge controller will regulate that, you just never want to go over on the voltage. So make sure the open circuit voltage of the panel is lower than the max input of the unit you’re plugging it into.
Because the holes are so small could you put zip ties in a loop that laps off the screen, twist to make a circle the size you want?
That’s actually a great idea! Thanks!
More expensive and much bigger than other commercially available 200 watt flexible panels.
Also, maximum fuse rating limits use of parallel strings to eliminate needs for NEC required fuses. Relatively high Voc means potentially more expensive MPPT controllers downstream.
The one main benefit is the lower weight.
agree
You're ignoring the fact these panels are CIGS. That's worth the extra cost.
1st time watcher, excellent video my Man!...
Thank you!
Great video, Jeremy! I imagine other solar panel companies will jumping on this band wagon! I have a Tab 400 teardrop camper and I’d have to pass on these, for lack of storage. I have two Bluetti units with panels, but I bet a lot of people will like these. Especially at their home. Maybe I need to rethink this 🤔 they would be nice and light to put on a drain on your roof. Hmmm!
Thank you for reviewing the exact two I was considering purchasing. The CIGS are really nice. But the warranty isn’t great and you would have to be really careful with them so as to not lose them to the wind or scratched due to twigs, sleet or hail. Perhaps building a frame for the CIGS using a glass cover may help as well. Thanks for the detailed review!
These are actually hurricane and hail rated
Hobotech scratched one of these up, walked on it, drove a quad bike on it and SHOT it, and it still put out about 160, as opposed to an undamaged one doing 180
I just saw this technology the other day on TH-cam. And my first thought was this would be perfect for a retractable awnings on the side of an RV or on one of those retractable awnings for your porch at home.
Sadly they only have an 18 month warranty. That does not say much for longevity, and at $529.00 per panel is a lot for such a short time of protection.
How about flex solar in cylindrical shape that could turn 360 degrees like wind vanes? Cylindrical means like a "can" shape. As wind vane all sides will be heated.
Then the panel will produce Mach less power because over half of it will always be in a shadow. It would be cool-looking but it'd be probably still more efficient to build a solar tracker even though it consumes power to move.
Can we get more info on these, cost per watt, performance vs glass panels, life expectations and warranty?
They need to section these to fit a bakflip truck bed cover so you can open up the truck bed.
Wow, over $500 for one 200w. Flexible and lightweight is nice, good if you're using it in various places like that, but if you're securing them permanently somewhere, definitely worth getting something else.
I agree but nice for this option if needed in certain scenarios.
This is wrong I would never get any other panels for any application in any situation. These will outlast those old outdated mono crystalline panels, both in durability, and an overall wattage output because of the low light performance.
Sure you think you might save a couple hundred bucks, but in the long run it will cost you more both in terms of financially, and also in headache and durability
Jeremy!! Great job on the review. I may bit up one of these for the top off my popup camper.
I have a rounded wooden RV roof, it would be good for that application if not for my two folding 100W Jakery panels I already bought. Thank you for sharing!
Can a solar panel heat a feral cat house somehow?
Where too bay farm?
Another good video just having sun in the fun
Playing outdoors with your Sun
its seems to have abit of a low energy output in reguards to its size being 2 metres and 20 centimeters when compared with similar sized panells ,that are the rigid panels,i guess there is the weight ,vs output thing
Can you stick them to round objects like big pipes, trees etc? I have some really tall trees...
Nice thorough review. Thanks!
Hi. May you please share the link for buying these panels? Thanks!
The link is in the description of this video. Thanks
what are the specific connectors you're using to connect the solar panels to each other and to the power station? I'm considering buying a flexible 100W solar panel x2 and the bougeRV power station, but before then I'd like to try to buy all the needed cables ahead of time, if possible.
The texture etfe coating does not show off the scratches as easily...
Each cell is itself a 'tiny solar panel' all in parallel...
Rolled up, how small a container could they safety be put in?
I wouldn’t roll them much tighter than the size of the box they come in.
Excellent review!
real practical review test, nice thx
Thin flexible panels are only useful if they are not in use all the time. They are handy to have as backup if they are mostly in storage, but they are kind of expensive for that. Great for camping now and then and maybe power outages. They travel well because they are light. In hot sun that plastic shit will break down in a year or less.
Bravo.....flexible........the only problem ........application........can't screw.......sticky glue on back......and how do u remove if panel go bad......no answer........cheers
These would great to use on my steel roof if they had magnets like you were suggesting.
That’s what I was thinking! You may be able to find some magnets with smaller studs.
Will the heat from the body it sticks (car) kill the panel? And reduce the output. Many flex panels in the past have had such problems. Which causes the panel doesn't last long.
Another design a panel of solar inside a parabolic silver that in turn turns 360 degrees like a wind vane. Parabolic like a DISC used in Disc-TV. PARABOLIC design increases energy 100 percent. But you must store the energy inside a solar generator. Or use parabolic solar energy directly to run appliances.
Hobotech was getting 165 watts from one panel laying on the ground, even after shooting it 4 times.
I’ve recently seen that video and that was pretty crazy!
Thanks for the excellent review. Could you please share the name of the scale you are you using? I've been looking for a good scale with a detachable display for a very long time. Greetings from Germany!
Here is a link to it but it is a a little finicky sometimes amzn.to/41QIOAM
(Disclaimer this is an affiliate link)
@@JeremiahMcintosh Thank you!
Thank you Sir. God bless.
How about solar polycystelline for indoor energy?
Indoor energy?
@@JeremiahMcintosh CIGS-panels are VERY GOOD for artificial lighting-energy production. I tested this yesterday in my house with my new 2/3-W CIGS-panels:
they produce about 1.5 Volts in the near of a 20W Halogen-bulb and about 1.2 A of energy (1.8 Watts). Which is enough o power a 1V-to-5-V-USB Powerconverter. to store that energy. My panel can produce about 4-5 Volts under a direct light of a 20 W Halogen-bulb.
It works 24/7 in indoors! You can use and produce energy with CIGS-panels with ANY lights, with LEDs, with old lightbulbs and even with other lightsources.
I love your videos! Can I have more details about the panels?And what is the main the difference between using some smaller power panels and one panel that have same power as the total of smaller one's?
If you use multiple smaller panels you will have to run then either in series which doubles the voltage or parallel which doubles the amperage but make sure you don’t go over the voltage that your power station will except or you can burn it out. Some units also have a low amperage input so sometimes you’re limited with how many you can run in parallel as well to get the full output from multiple panels. Ideally, you would want to get panels that have close to the voltage and amperage output that your unit will accept.
@@JeremiahMcintosh Thanks so much!!😀
Fantastic Panel and Video. Thank you. (Spoolbox)
Can you walk on it. Say you have it on top of your RV. But need to walk around or just want to watch the stars from high above
Yes I have walked on these without any problems but just keep in mind the coating could get scratched if you have something on your feet.
Very thorough and helpful
Thanks much !
We were probably all asking about the link if you had one
This panel dimensions tell me please
They are in the video
Can you fold this without cracking it?
No you can not fold it.
Okay, thank you. I appreciate the response.
I love your content.
Thank you!
So cool 👍
Please test based on temperature. Panel temperature really makes a difference. The advantage of hard panels is that you can leave an air gap below them for cooling to improve efficiency.
The question is how long it will last
In theory a CIGS-panel which is not glued on a foil only will last ~100-200 years (not limited to 20 years like a normal silicium-based solarcell based tech).
For a foil-CIGS-panel it will die quicker because Sun will destroy the foil much faster. See? So it has nothing to do with the "CIGS"-technology, but rather how thick your material is. iF the foil is very thick it will also last longer.
This is the price you pay for a much lighter CIGS-panel. Because typically such foil is very, very lightweight!
My CIGS aren´t glued on foil, thus it will last until the year 2100 is over. lol
When they start making bi-facial thin film I would be all over that for the top of my small green hose
That isn´t possible as CIGS is allready including 3 different solarcells (Green/Blue and a red-light collecting one) into one single solarcell.
But Bi-facial uses standard, old silicium-cells. Which can break. Which are HEAVY in weight. And which are BAD at shading-behaviour.
Looks sexy and minimalist but from almost all solar panels experts. Flexibles really sucks in dissipating heat which degrade their life cycle or lower output within a short period of time.
Of course, could have them as disposable contact lenses, if they're cheap enough. Tough choice which way to go for RV systems 😢.
Very nice
The efficiency rating is only 16%?? The bluetti is over 23%.
That's wild
I heard flexibile solar panels don't last nearly as long as the hard ones, and that they are a fire hazard from over heating too. Have they improved them them yet? I just love how light weight they are!
Pretty impressive all said and done, and noticed despite the lower efficiency, the size is similar to the bluetti portable.
The durability of the coating is concern though, especially since I plan on using it on a roof top tent
Ypou ever heard of using a grinder? Be very easy to make them magnets work
Been thinking about making a frame for these with carbon fiber tubes, and having the mount points for the grommets to make a larger array with 2x200w panels, keeping the carbon fiber tubes in the center for storage, and making a radiused container for the panels to slip into to protect from damage when not in use. We have a need for some electric when we lose grid power, and having 400-800w of power that can be stowed away nice and small, or even moved easily would be really useful, could run the refrigerators indefinitely and provide basic telecoms power as well as lighting. Would love to see costs come down on these cause at $500 for 200w is abut out of my budget, I have 2 100w panels with a hinge and controller/battery already that can do the minimum to keep some items functional for 12h but wouldn't make it till the sun came back up.
Just like your ebike hill test is much too thorough. Wait, too thorough is impossible. You answered many questions. Great intelligent, common sense testing. Would two of these panels be enough to charge an ebike and keep it charged if you were living off grid in an emergency?
If it was sunny one 200w would be enough if using a 2amp charger for your Ebike but but you would still have to go through a power station to convert it to Ac.
Nice but very cost prohibitive ATM
Not a fan of the dimensions of these panels. Would rather see these squared up a bit , something like 54x43 I feel would more useful for mounting on an rv which I see as the main market for flexible panels.
Why not a damned word about the heat output from these in contact with surfaces?
Other flat/ flex panels have caught things on fire in extreme cases, so why avoid discussing that factor on these?
How about you try and blasting it with a mirror
This company really chose a great name. Bouge basically means snooty arsehole, someone who is bougey is one who sets themselves apart from others by overtly displaying opulence.
Smart name choice.
They do make good solid panels I bought two 175w panels for 145$ each on sale and they put out almost 200 Watts each year's later
They might as well have named their company SODRA. (Show Off Douchey Rich Asshole).
The term Bogey is in every case an insult, not a badge of honour the way being called OCD, or a nerd has become. If someone calls you Bouge or bougey, it's a criticism, not just a friendly observation or compliment. Type "Let them eat cake" into google and see where the word originates.
Quiet optimistic review, why are these expensive flex panels always under performing?
On top of that ,their life cycle is less than half of glass panels.
I would be careful with the bending of them , even more as they get older and brittle due to UV detoriation
The biggest drawback to these panels is their price and lifespan. It will only take about 6 months of throwing them around to destroy the clear film. At 3x the cost of large panels it’s still not a good buy.
Crazy technology? What's the first thing you have to do to make this panel actually useful ... attach it to a flat surface.
I bought CIGS panels 5 years ago. 230w 75v. It's far better that the usual poly on mono panels giving up to 26% better efficiency. Price is higher almost double... But if space is an issue its the way to go...
If you want to protect these panels for a long time... Build an aluminium frame with glass and stick it. Or fix it to whatever. The sticky protective film perish over time. But perhaps things changed over the last few years.
Do some homework in the history of these CIGS panels they have been around some time
One thing you need to know about panels) electricity is wattage is volts time amps.
Telling me wattage doesn't tell me how well they work.
A 12v batti should charge at 14v.
A 14v charge at noon is a lame panel.
It will only charge decent at peak sun.
A 20v panel will charge most of the day.
How many amps is how fast it will charge.
Wattage means nothing as the panel may not produce much if it only works good for 3 hours of the day.
3 bucks a watt is just way too pricey
Over 500.00 for a 200w panel. Lol 🤣. I'll stick with 139.00 for 2 100w panels. It costs me less than 500. for my 400w system to charge my solar chargers and it's all plug and play
There definitely not for everyone but great for certain scenarios.
But, can you test and report how "these things" perform over the years? Or are you simply " gilding the lilly" and making them seem better than they actually are? Can they give us 25 YEARS of performance? Or 20 minutes?
Wait until you see the video I’m working on now ,you’ll be impressed! I tortured the 100w panel including drilling holes in it and didn’t loose much performance. Check out my instagram reel to see a preview reel.
was only a matter of time....
They are just to long... 👀
That film on that solar panel looks horrible
It does scratch pretty easily.
These are a easy skip for me , just way too expensive and cheaply made
the price on these are stupid expensive. hard pass
Quintillion and quintillion dollars business in space electricity store batteries on moon or mars
The size is a joke. And this company is shady
Watch your hands !!! Nobody cares about them.
Question: assuming you have the panel set away from the dwelling .... do you lose wattage over the longer distance wire?
Yes you would depending on the size of the wire you are using.
Ridiculous, the size is way too big for the low 200watt output. Good they're flexible but most setups, especially for a van takes up way too much roof real estate. 🤔
They can be thrown on the ground and used for "non-permanent" charging.
The CIGS cells *are* less efficient compared to the monocrystalline solar cells.
The chief issue(s) are overall efficiency and long-term durability - with the CIGS cells being better…
Not worth the added cost to me given all the downsides. Even though the durability is quite impressive, I’m not abusing my panels enough for it to be worth the upgrade.
Made in china?