The first step is to work out your boat's energy requirements. All you have to do is add up all the energy in watt-hours used by each device on your boat, such as the fridge, lights, computers and so on. Energy is powe. Leaving aside the exotic new Perovskite panels, there are three types that you might consider – a choice that hasn't changed in years. There are amorphous panels (good in shady conditio. This question is a bit of a red herring – in reality, the question should be 'How much space do I have?' The academic drive is to make panels that are more environmentally friendly, both to. If you're just fitting a small panel to top-up batteries on a mooring, buy a cheap rigid panel and find places on your boat where you can tilt it to catch the sun's rays for the majority of the da. Let me just revisit this: the relationship between the nominal power of a boat solar panel and what you really get. When the manufacturer quotes, for example, 100W for a panel, that i.