After months of winter storage, your van or off-grid rig’s power system deserves a careful once-over. Cold, inactivity, moisture, and small critters can create problems that won’t announce themselves until you’re deep in the woods. This guide walks you through a practical, hands-on spring tune-up for solar panels, charge controllers, inverters, and batteries (flooded, AGM, and LiFePO4). Follow the safety-first steps, use the recommended tools, and you’ll restore reliable power and extend the life of your components.
Pre-check Safety Steps
Before you touch anything, follow these safety basics:
- Disconnect the battery bank and isolate solar inputs where possible. Remove loads and turn off inverters/chargers.
- PPE: wear safety glasses, acid-resistant gloves when working on lead-acid batteries, and insulated tools.
- Ventilation: equalizing or charging flooded batteries can release hydrogen — work outside or in a well-ventilated area.
- Remove jewelry and avoid metal tools near battery terminals to prevent shorts.
- Document: take photos of wiring and settings before you change anything.
Safety note: If you smell burning, see smoke, or find a cracked battery case, stop and replace the part. Do not attempt to repair a physically damaged battery.
Solar Panel Cleaning & Physical Inspection
Panels often just need a soap-and-water refresh after winter. Inspect for hail dents, delamination, and loose mounting hardware.
- Use a soft brush or sponge and mild soap. Avoid abrasive cleaners.
- Check adhesive seals and flashing for cracks; reseal with solar-grade butyl or silicone where needed.
- Inspect connectors and cables for corrosion, heat damage, or rodent chew. Replace damaged MC4 connectors and tape or heat-shrink exposed splices.
- Measure open-circuit voltage (Voc) on a sunny day and compare to nameplate—major voltage loss (>10%) suggests panel damage.
Charge Controller & Inverter Diagnostics
Start with visual checks, then move to electrical tests.
- Inspect terminals for corrosion and proper torque. Loose terminals cause heat and intermittent faults.
- Check LED/error codes and consult the manual for fault meanings. Many controllers offer a diagnostic log or event history.
- Measure PV input voltage and panel current under load; compare to expected MPPT operating point. A big current shortfall may indicate shading, wiring loss, or panel damage.
- For inverters, test AC output at the receptacle and verify transfer-switch functionality if you have a hybrid system.
- Firmware: check the manufacturer’s website for controller/inverter firmware updates. Back up settings and follow the update steps carefully.
Battery-Specific Tune-Ups
Flooded Lead-Acid (Wet Cell)
- Visual: check for cracked cases, loose caps, and residue. Clean terminals and neutralize corrosion with a baking soda solution.
- Hydrometer: test specific gravity of each cell. Variations >0.050 between cells indicate problems.
- Water: top up with distilled water only to the recommended level after charging.
- Equalization: perform only if recommended by the manufacturer — typically a controlled higher-voltage charge to equalize cells. Monitor temperature and gassing; stop if overheating occurs.
AGM and Gel (VRLA)
- No watering. Avoid equalization unless the manufacturer explicitly allows it—most VRLA batteries are damaged by sustained overvoltage.
- Check for bulging, cracking, and terminal corrosion. Measure resting voltage and capacity with a load test if possible.
LiFePO4 (Lithium Iron Phosphate)
- Check BMS health and individual cell voltages (using appropriate connectors or a service port). Cells should be within ~0.05 V of each other at full charge.
- Balance: LiFePO4 systems usually balance automatically through the BMS during charge. If cells are imbalanced, charge at the recommended current to allow the BMS to top-balance, or use a compatible cell-balancer device per manufacturer guidance.
- Avoid manual equalization. Do not charge above the manufacturer’s max voltage and protect cells from cold charging if applicable.
State-of-Charge (SoC) Testing and Capacity Checks
Accurate SoC is key to safe use and long life.
- Open-circuit voltage gives a rough SoC: rest the battery 4+ hours after charging or use for a more accurate reading. Use manufacturer voltage-to-SoC charts.
- Install or verify a battery monitor/shunt for coulomb-counting (amp-hours in/out) — the best long-term SoC method.
- Load test older lead-acid batteries: apply a rated discharge for a known time and measure remaining capacity. Replace if capacity is below ~70–80% of rated.
Cell Balancing and Equalization Guidance
Balance and equalize carefully and only when appropriate:
- Lead-acid equalization is a controlled overcharge. Use the controller’s equalize setting or a lab-grade charger and monitor temperature, electrolyte, and voltage per cell.
- LiFePO4: rely on the BMS. If persistent imbalance exists, consult the battery manufacturer; occasional top-balancing via proper charging is safe if supported.
- Never equalize VRLA/AGM unless the manufacturer explicitly supports it.
Firmware, Wiring, and Connector Checks
- Update firmware on MPPT controllers and inverters where updates fix stability or safety issues. Save settings and follow vendor procedures.
- Check wiring for correct gauge, secure terminations, and proper fusing at battery positives. Replace any heat-damaged or undersized wire.
- Torque battery terminals and busbar connections to manufacturer specs. Loose connections cause voltage drops and heat.
Common Failure Signs and Simple Repairs
- Reduced charging current: clean panels, verify MPPT settings, check for shading, and measure panel Voc.
- Rapid battery self-discharge: cell damage or parasitic loads. Run a parasitic drain test and inspect battery for sulfation or bad cells.
- Intermittent inverter faults: loose AC or DC connections, damaged ground, or thermal protection tripping. Tighten connections and inspect cooling fans.
- Corroded terminals and connectors: clean, neutralize, and protect with dielectric grease. Replace badly corroded lugs or MC4s.
When to replace: if a battery shows physical damage, holds <70–80% of rated capacity, or a LiFePO4 battery shows failing cell voltages or BMS faults, plan replacement. For controllers or inverters that repeatedly fault after basic troubleshooting or show smoke/burn marks, replace them.
Recommended Tools & Meters
- Multimeter (true RMS), clamp meter, and IR thermometer
- Battery hydrometer (for flooded cells)
- Battery monitor with shunt (coulomb counting)
- Insulated hand tools, torque wrench, wire stripper/crimper, heat-shrink and soldering iron
- MC4 removal tool, dielectric grease, distilled water, baking soda
- Small ladder and soft brush for roof access and panel cleaning
Spring Tune-Up Checklist
- Document current setup with photos. Disconnect and isolate power.
- Clean panels; inspect mounting and seals.
- Visually inspect wiring, connectors, and fuses. Tighten, reseal, or replace as needed.
- Measure panel Voc and current; compare to specifications.
- Inspect charge controller and inverter, check LEDs, and update firmware if available.
- Perform battery-specific checks (hydrometer for flooded, BMS check for LiFePO4).
- Top up flooded batteries with distilled water after charging.
- Run a controlled charge cycle and verify charging profile and termination voltages.
- Reinstall loads and perform a functional test (lights, fridge, inverter loads).
- Record new baseline values: Voltages, startup currents, float voltages, and shunt readings.
Quick Troubleshooting Flowcharts
Panels Not Charging
- Are panels clean and unshaded? If no — clean/remove shading, retest.
- Is there PV open-circuit voltage on the controller input? If no — check panel wiring, fuses, breakers, and Voc at panel.
- Is controller showing faults? If yes — consult manual, reset controller, update firmware.
- Panel Voc OK, but little current: measure panel current in sun — if low, test individual panel Voc/Isc for damage.
Battery Not Holding Charge
- Check for parasitic loads with battery disconnected — is there current draw? If yes, trace load.
- Measure resting voltage after 4–24 hours. If low, perform capacity/load test.
- For flooded: check specific gravity per cell. If one cell low → replace battery or cell bank.
- If LiFePO4: check BMS error codes and individual cell voltages; consult vendor if BMS trips repeatedly.
Inverter Not Powering Loads
- Is inverter ON and showing healthy status? If not, check AC input and DC supply voltage at terminals.
- Check fuses/AC breaker and transfer switch (if present).
- High loads causing shutdown? Reduce load and test with known-good small load.
- Persistent failure: consult inverter error codes and manufacturer support.
Key Takeaways
- Start with safety: isolate batteries, ventilate, and use insulated tools.
- Clean and inspect solar and wiring thoroughly — most problems are mechanical or connection-related.
- Follow battery-specific procedures: water flooded cells only after charging; don’t equalize VRLA; let LiFePO4 BMS handle balancing.
- Use a proper battery monitor for accurate SoC and long-term health tracking.
- Document baseline measurements after your tune-up so future issues are easier to spot.





