It is not so much a question of amps that a solar panel produces for the consumer, as it is a question of watts, or in many cases, kilowatts. Generally, you can buy different sizes and kinds of solar panels for a range of somewhere between 3kW to 8kW, and sometimes even greater amounts such as 10kW or 11kW systems. As the wattage grows greater, the price does also, and so does the money you save from your electric company. As your question wasn't the amount of money they will save you, I will leave you to ask that question of someone else.
Probably because a solar panel can produce electricity for many years.
OVER 9000
it depends on your solar panels, i can tell you if you know the amperage and the volts, you can find the amount of watts it produce, the equation is watts = amps x volts. hate to give you an equation as an answer
I have read it can be ran off an 100watt solar panel. It uses .7-3.3 amps.
Amps measure the current flow so they flow all the time whether it's a minute or an hour, until they are switched off. A solar panel generates watts, that is volts times amps, so if the panel were a 20-volt panel the current would be 2 amps.
Watts = Volts x Amps, if you use your algebra you will find that it's approx 14 Amps.
It depends on how many watts each panel can produce.
180 amps. Assuming the panel will be loaded only 80%.
watts are equal to amps times volts.
There is too much information there. Charging a 100 amp-hour battery fully would take 18 hours at 5.5 amps, or 6 hours at 16.67 amps. At 5.5 amps the power would be 12x5.5 or 66 watts, and this is the rating of the solar panel required. That would be about 0.4 of a square metre.
You look at the job you need to do, ie, how many volts and amps, or volts and watts, that you need. Then you look in the catalogs for a solar cell or solar cell array to produce that much power.
1 kilowatt equals 1000 watts. An 80 watt solar panel under ideal conditions produces as you might guess 80 watts. So under ideal conditions it would take 12.5 hours for the panel to produce 1000 watts. (1000/80=12.5)