I'm looking at installing a SmartSolar 100V|50A MPPT charge controller which I would like to connect to four Canadian Solar 605W Super High Power Mono PERC HiKU7 PV panels, each rated at 41.5Voc, 18.52A Isc, and 605W rated maximum power output. The plan is to put the four panels in 2-by-2 series/parallel, i.e. 2 panels in series, and 2 groups of these in parallel. If my school fees haven't been completely wasted, this should mean that the panel's output voltage and current should not (significantly) exceed 83V and 37.04A which is within the Smartsolar's limits. The total maximum rated power output, however, will exceed the 1400W maximum that the MPPT is rated for (at 24V, which is what I will be using).
I like the 605W panels because a.) the rated maximum power output is a theoretical maximum that in practice will rarely (if ever) be achieved, and b.) on cloudy days a bigger panel will still provide enough power to be useful. On bright sunny days this means of course that the PV panels will be under-utilized, but I'm cool with that.
So here's my question: is the Smartsolar protected against overcurrent and/or limited to pass no more than 1400W, or does it simply pass on whatever oomph comes out of the PV panels until it fries itself?
Knowing Victron I would assume the Smartsolar will not rely on the PV panels maxing out in order to prevent itself from burning out but has current limiting features. However, my supplier claims that I should order PV panels that have a lower power rating because the Smartsolar can't handle the larger ones.
Can I safely put oversized panels on the Smartsolar (staying within its voltage and current limits, of course) without starting a bonfire in my MPPT?
// FvW