How do I calculate the battery bank size for my RV?
Total your daily power use in amp-hours (each 12V load's amps times the hours per day you use it), multiply by the days of reserve you want without charging (two is a common boondocking baseline), add about 10% for ageing, then divide by the usable share of the battery. Lead-acid is sized to about 50% usable and LiFePO4 lithium to about 80%, so the same daily use needs a much larger lead-acid bank. The calculator above does this math from the loads you select.
How much solar do I need for my RV or van?
Take your daily energy use in watt-hours and divide by your peak sun-hours times 0.75, the real-world derate for flat roof-mounted panels. As a rough feel, a rig using 100 amp-hours a day at 12V (about 1,200 watt-hours) needs roughly 300 watts of panel in strong sun, about 350 to 400 on an average day, and 500 to 600 in a weak-sun month. Look up your own worst travel month with NREL's free PVWatts tool and size to that, because a system sized for the summer average will fall short in December.
Lead-acid or lithium: how much capacity can I actually use?
Usable capacity is the catch. Flooded, AGM, and gel lead-acid batteries should be cycled to only about 50% depth of discharge to protect their life, so a 200 amp-hour lead-acid bank gives you about 100 usable amp-hours. LiFePO4 lithium is commonly planned to about 80%, so a 100 amp-hour lithium battery gives roughly 80 usable, weighs a third as much, and lasts several times as many cycles. Some lithium vendors advertise 100% usable, but the BMS cuts out near empty and cold and ageing shrink real capacity, which is why this tool plans to 80%.
Can I run my RV air conditioner on solar?
Not overnight, and not from a normal rig's system. A rooftop RV air conditioner draws roughly 1,200 to 1,800 watts continuously, so even an hour or two would need a very large lithium bank (think 600 amp-hours and up) plus a big inverter and a large array to recharge it. Solar's job in a rig is to keep the 12V house loads and devices running and to top the batteries; running the air conditioner is a generator, shore-power, or short-burst-on-a-huge-lithium-bank job. The calculator sizes the house system, not air conditioning.
What size charge controller do I need for my RV solar?
Divide your total array watts by the battery voltage to get the charging current, then multiply by 1.25 as the safety factor NEC 690.8 uses for bright-irradiance current spikes. A 400 watt array on a 12V bank works out to about 33 amps times 1.25, so roughly a 40 amp controller. Pick MPPT over PWM for the extra harvest, and confirm the controller's maximum input voltage covers your panels' open-circuit voltage on a cold, sunny day.
Does this calculator replace a qualified RV technician?
No. It is a planning estimate to get you in the right ballpark and help you shop. The real installation, wire gauge, fusing, battery placement, and ventilation must follow NEC and RVIA practice and your equipment's manuals, a LiFePO4 bank needs a battery-management system and alternator protection (a DC-DC charger) if you charge from the engine, and every bank needs properly sized overcurrent protection at the battery. Treat the numbers here as a starting point for that work, not the last word, and have the final system signed off by a qualified RV electrician.