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Victron Energy SmartSolar MPPT TR VE.Can Solar Charge Controller (Bluetooth) - Charge Controllers for Solar Panels - 250V, 100 amp, 12/24/36/48-Volt

  • Based on 103 reviews
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Availability: In Stock.
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Arrives Sunday, Dec 29
Order within 22 hours and 42 minutes
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Style: 250V 100A


Features

  • SMART SOLAR CHARGE CONTROLLER: Solar charge the smart way with the Victron Energy SmartSolar MPPT charge controller, to ensure that every ray of available sunlight is converted into usable energy, while optimizing battery longevity.
  • MAXIMIZE POWER OUTPUT: With lightning-fast optimum power point tracking and intelligent charge algorithms the Victron MPPT solar charge controller makes sure you always get the maximum possible power output, even when your solar panels are partially covered in shade.
  • SYNCHRONIZED CHARGING: Multiple SmartSolar MPPT charge controllers can synchronize to behave as one, simultaneously switching through different charge stages to ensure battery longevity and system wide energy optimization.
  • CONNECTIVITY: The VictronConnect app lets you connect with your system to gain insight into real-time data and 30-day performance history. Easily configure devices with battery presets, change settings, update firmware and set alarms to tailor your system to your every need.
  • INTELLIGENT LOAD OUTPUT: Power devices directly and securely from your solar charger. Configure the voltage at which a load should disconnect and rely on the MPPT charge controller to automatically disconnect the loads if the battery voltage drops too low.

Brand: Victron Energy


Voltage: 250 Volts


Item Weight: 4.5 Kilograms


Manufacturer: Victron Energy


Manufacturer: Victron Energy


Brand Name: Victron Energy


Voltage: 250 Volts


Item Weight: 4.5 Kilograms


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Sunday, Dec 29

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

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View our full returns policy here.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Awesome Product.. 3 200watt panels pushing 47amps @12v immediately
Style: 150V 100A
I am a huge fan of Victron Energy. Their products are top notch. I have 4 now including a Multiplus II 2x120, the MPPT 150/100 veCan, etc.. Their software is great, the products just work out of the box. In the case of this MPPT 150/100 ve.Can, Immediately it started pushing 47 amps in bulk charge at my battery pack from 3 - 200Watt grape solar panels mounted in series on the roof of my rv. Hats off, this is awesome device. I have only run into one problem thus far and I think it should be noted. When I got this MPPT and installed it, the Bluetooth was turned off! For a device I specifically bought with Bluetooth, it was disabled in config. Ok I get it, some people might not even care or they have a cerbo gx to control it with, and meh maybe it uses some power or something. But really? I am currently waiting for my usb to Ve. Direct cable (Because of course it doesn't have Ve. Bus so I can't use the adaptor I currently have) to arrive so I can change the config to turn on the Bluetooth. I almost thought it was broken until I found a thread on the community forums that it is common to find them turned off. Anyway, rant aside. Make sure you have a laptop with VictronConnect and a ve.Direct to usb cable in hand when installing this device if you plan on using Bluetooth. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on June 6, 2022 by Paul Aicher

  • Quality product!
Style: 150V 100A
Love this charge controller! It's my second Victron product, and it does not disappoint. With the Bluetooth app, you can see exactly what it is doing. App tells you current input, output in watts. Shows total charging output history for many days. Not sure how many. Tells you how long it was in bulk, absorb, and float. This allows you to better plan your usage. It tells you accumulated kWh over time. I run 1000 watts PV, generating as high as 900 watts peak. Regularly runs at about 55 amps charging current, and barely gets warm. No fans. Just sits there silently, doing it's job without issues. Wire lugs are of a generous size. I have Monster brand 600 strand 4gg cables running into it right now. I have an old cell phone permanently running as a monitor. No need for the auxiliary monitor that Victron offers. (Sorry Victron:) The cell phone runs on bluetooth, so it can be moved anywhere in the house within range. I bought the 150V/100 amp and run it on 12v, but I like having the option to continue using it if I choose to go to 48v. I hope to have this cc for many years. I've burned up two cheaper CCs running them near 100% of rated capacity. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on January 25, 2022 by ToddtheCarver ToddtheCarver

  • This thing is a straight beast
Style: 250V 100A
It handles a lot of power and has no weird quirks or stupid work arounds you have to worry about. Does just what it says and does it well
Reviewed in the United States on November 30, 2024 by Chef M

  • Its a Vic, what else is there to say?
Style: 250V 70A
It's a Victron, one of the best. You pay for what you get with this bad boy. Do your homework though, Don't expect consistent numbers readings from your phone/tab/whatever you are remote viewing with. There are several variables that constitute that wattage number. Overall great unit!
Reviewed in the United States on September 25, 2024 by Cal-Tex

  • it just works....
Style: 150V 100A
The media could not be loaded. product performs well. My only fear is my entire constellation of Victron gear came from various online vendors... which one shall I call with questions???? Luckily I have not needed to obtain help yet.
Reviewed in the United States on January 11, 2024 by john m brunson john m brunson

  • Great solar charge controller
Style: 150V 100A
Works like a charm. Hooked up to 1400 watch of solar. The Bluetooth function is really nice too as you can monitor and gives you a history of your daily output.
Reviewed in the United States on January 26, 2024 by Elmer H.

  • No manual mode control
Style: 150V 100A
update 2/16/24: The History page shows the cumulative time spent in each mode, bulk, absorb and float but the values shown are wrong. It appears to count absorb time from when the batteries rise above the FLOAT set point instead of the ABSORB one like all the other controllers I own, notably Outback. So the history display undercounts the cumulative time for bulk and over counts it for absorb. Looking at the Trend data the numbers are close to what I expect, a 90 minute absorb timer holds the voltage at the absorb set point for about 90 minutes but you can’t tell that by looking at the history page. The amount it is off by depends on conditions, today mine was over by 100%, History showed 3 hours in absorb vs the 1.5 hours the timer is actually set for and which the Trend data shows is actually what the controller did. This is confusing and defeats the purpose of the history page not to mention how hard it becomes to validate the settings you’re using for whatever kind of battery technology you have. update 2/10/24: dropped to two stars Lack of manual mode control is a major pita when the controller stays in absorb mode too long, frequently it overcharges but sometimes undercharges my GC2 batteries and I then want to force it. I think this is more than just me being picky. I’ve lived with it for my lead/acid batteries which are pretty forgiving but I will be switching over to LiFeP04 soon and at that time I may have to revert to using my Outback FM60 instead, that at least I can control. The most common situation is on poor solar days when it never reaches the absorb setpoint or only reaches it late in the day and as a result my coloumb counter shows that as much as +25ah has gone into the batteries. That high of a number is tolerated by lead acid batteries but it’s hard on LiFeP02 ones, I only expect to see high positive amp hour numbers after fully absorbing and then equalizing. The only way to force it out of absorb is to go in and move the absorb setpoint down to something less than whatever it’s delivering at the moment. Ugh. Also the History bar chart seems to indicate the time spent in each mode only roughly. Ex: if it reaches absorb but then conditions deteriorate to where it cannot maintain the absorb set point the absorb time continues to advance - it’s possible that internally they’re keeping track but just not showing it in the history (because often the history abs time value is greater than the abs timer value. Regardless it’s confusing). Coupled with the lack of an absorb timer countdown display you cannot predict when it’s going to transition to float. These are issues that Outback gets exactly right with their FM series. I am really not impressed with Victron right now. update 12/03/23: I’m dropping to 4 stars because of the lack of manual mode control. I will change this back to 5 stars if I learn over time that this controller really doesn’t need it and my complaint here is just that I’m not used to it (but honestly how freaking big of a compromise would it be to provide the option, the thing isn’t going to orbit the earth or travel to mars ffs). The controller is slow to transition from absorb to float, it can take 5-6 minutes once the batteries settle down to the float setpoint before the controller finally takes over supplying 100+% of the demand. It gets the delta down to less than an amp pretty quick but it dithers around for a long time trying to find the sweet spot where it’s producing enough current to feed the house and keep my battery’s coloumb counter net positive. Once it hits this state though it continues searching, it drops the voltage and the batteries go neg and then it raises it again. This could be the controller trying to learn my system, the wiring, loads and battery characteristics. It will take a few days before I can say. For now I can say it does a better job at regulating the float voltage when there’s ~10a of house demand, at 4a it was hunting its brains out. Again, it could have been learning. orig: All my other controllers have allowed the charger to be forced manually into float, or bulk mode. My Outback fm60 for example occasionally sticks in charged state after absorb completes and I have to force it to float. There’s nothing in the Victron manual, the front panel or the app that I can find to do this. If the controller does what it’s expected to do then it’s not necessary I guess but if it doesn’t then the recourse will be complicated. Also the trend data is not delivered in the BLE advertisement extra data field that allows their app (and my esp32) to receive instant data, only the basics are in there and I don’t believe Victron plans to add it. The solar panel voltage and amps are also not included. That’s disappointing, I have a stand alone BLE display solution but I want to include trend/solar data and the only way to get that is by connecting and requesting each one (which is why the app times out and has to reconnect). Ugh, I have to track min and max numbers myself. Regardless of that it’s a solid controller so far and for now I’m keeping it. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on November 18, 2023 by P. Meyer

  • Muy bueno y funciona bien.....
Style: 250V 100A
Ayuda mucho en la configura cion de los paneles solares....
Reviewed in the United States on March 26, 2024 by miguel alicea

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