I installed my solar panel this weekend; 80w of mono-crystaline loveliness is now fastened to my shed roof.

I started out by making a cardboard template of the fixing holes on the back of the panel. There are eight of these, it seemes a bit like overkill but I thought it was best if I used the lot. I then placed this template on the shed roof where I wanted it to go and hammered in panel pins in the points where the holes lined up (I should have taken pictures of this, wish I had now).
I'd made myself some brackets from channel section aluminium, and these had a locating hole that I could drop over the panel pins I'd nailed in and held them in the right place. All it needed then was a good blob of silicone sealent under each bracket to stop the rain getting in and fasteneing down with stainless steel screws.

I'd fitted stainless bolts into the panel fixing holes and held them there with a sort of PTFE washer. The idea was that the panel's holes were oval, and I wondered if I should use this fact to allow for expansion; the way I have it allows for a little of this when it gets hot because it has a some slip due to the PTFE.
Anyway, I droppped the panel onto the roof, and all the holes lined up perfectly, which goes to show that it's worth taking a bit more trouble with the preparation. Tightening up the bolts was all that was needed and then connection to the battery through a blocking diode.
I put the feed in through my homemade ammeter and was seeing 2-3 amps in the bright low sunshine (it's an amp indicator rather than a meter I'll admit).
24 hours later and I was seeing float. Now this was quite a special moment for me because it's never happened before; the wind here is not consistent enough and my wind turbine isn't quite there yet either. I'm using Ghurds dump controller and it was happily ticking away and making the dump load warm. I'm now in a position to start properly using the power.