
ECO-WORTHY 130W 12V Semi-Flexible Monocrystalline Solar Panel
This looks more like a van-roof panel than a shed-roof one, but only if your 12V setup is already thought through.
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- Rated 4.6 stars, which is well above average for this sort of listing.
- This is a bigger spend, so it needs a clearer case than a cheap add-on.
- This only works if the setup details, output, and included hardware all line up with the job you have in mind.
Check the live Amazon price, seller, delivery timing, and returns before you decide.
If specs, bundle contents, or compatibility matter for this kind of product, that is usually where the final decision gets made.
ECO-WORTHY 130W 12V Semi-Flexible Monocrystalline Solar Panel
A 130W 12V semi-flexible monocrystalline panel aimed at campervans, caravans, boats and other awkward roofs where a rigid panel is harder to place. The lighter build and waterproof junction box suit mobile setups, but it is still a fairly serious spend, so make sure the cable length and mounting method fit your system.
The interesting bit here is not just the 130W figure but the semi-flexible format, which suits vans, caravans and boats better than a standard rigid panel. The 4.6-star average is encouraging, with owners mentioning decent output in dull weather, but 76 reviews is still a modest base, so the wiring and mounting details need a proper look.
With semi-flexible solar, focus less on the headline wattage and more on fit, weight, wiring and what your UK conditions will really deliver. Check the panel size, bend tolerance, waterproofing, cable type and whether you already have the right charge controller, because those details matter more than a sunny-day output claim.
- Mounted on a campervan, caravan or boat where a lighter, slightly bendable panel is easier to place than glass.
- Keeping a 12V battery topped up in storage or on trips, where roof space is awkward rather than perfectly flat.
- Adding more generation than a small maintenance panel, without jumping straight to a heavy rigid setup.
- You need a simple all-in-one kit with controller, mounts and everything else clearly included in one box.
- A rigid panel would fit fine, because those can make more sense if flexibility is not actually needed.
- You expect the full 520Wh every day in UK conditions, since that figure assumes strong sunshine.
- Confirm exactly what comes in the box, especially whether a charge controller, adhesive or mounting hardware is included.
- Check the cable ends, cable length and whether the supplied 2.9ft leads suit your battery or existing solar setup.
- Look for the panel dimensions and bend tolerance to make sure it fits your roof shape without over-flexing it.
- Read the rated output details for 12V use and series or parallel linking if you plan to add more panels later.
At £89.99, this sits toward the upper end of the £50 to £100 band, which feels fair if you genuinely need a 130W semi-flexible panel, but harder to justify if a standard rigid panel would do the same job.
Is this suited to a campervan or caravan roof?
It looks aimed at that sort of job. The flexible, lighter build makes more sense on curved or awkward roofs than a rigid glass panel, but you still need to confirm the panel size and mounting method.
Does it include everything needed to charge a 12V battery?
Not necessarily. The listing mentions a waterproof junction box and cables, but you should confirm whether a charge controller and mounting materials are included before treating it as a full kit.
Is 130W enough for storage charging and light off-grid use?
For keeping a caravan or camper battery topped up, it could be a sensible size. For heavier daily power use, output depends a lot on season, weather and how well the panel is positioned.





