Is it OK to directly connect 12v solar to just one 6v cell to help me push more amps in? I think it is... but looking for confirmation :-)
You can, but it is pointless.
Connecting a 12V PV to a 6V battery will not increase the amps much... No increase in amps worth mentioning.
With a decent controller (low Vf), the amp increase is maybe 3~5%?
Might as well leave the pair of 6V connected for 12V, and it will send the same charging amps through BOTH batteries at the same time.
I disagree that 180W of 12V solar is insufficient to equalize 12V 350AH.
I have seen unregulated 3A 50W smoke a 12V 110AH, more than once. It certainly would not do it in winter here, or if the battery was regularly powering a load, but it will do it.
I agree with Simon.
The shop has 180W-ish of 12V solar. Usually around 880AH of 12V (8 x 6V golf cart). A few days of good sun in summer to get the bank 'actually full', and after that equalizing is not a big issue. But we would never intentionally let them get anywhere near 15.5V, let alone 17.0V. (the battery bank is at room temp)
About "If you just "get to" 14.6 volts, then drop to float, the battery is only reaching, at most 80% SOC."
I could agree or disagree, mostly I 95% disagree.
Case in point. My truck.
If the alt is cold it charges to 13.9 to 15.1 but just for a very few minutes. Warm it charges to 13.5 to 14.3. (from Chilton's #8163, page 2-17)
The truck sat for almost a year a little while back, maybe ran it a half hour every month or 2. Sometimes had to charge the battery to get it started, meaning it was sitting while severely undercharged for a long time.
Often had an inverter clamped to it to power drills or saws, when it was not running (the other guys could help me push it started if the battery went dead).
Anyway.
Changed the battery about a month a ago. It was a prorated for 12 months battery (cheapest they made at the time, $28 back when lead was cheap, and they don't even sell anything in the same class now). It was in the truck for 9 years and 10 months.
Turns out the battery was still OK. Not great, but OK. The issue was the alternator amp output was low, and couldn't keep up with the heater fan and headlights at the same time, unless on the highway.
There is a good chance leaving it as it is, and adding a cheap (the cheaper and older, the better) 20A car battery charger (or 2) for a day (or 2), will let the PVs and controller do the equalization charge.
You bought a controller that equalizes and accounts for the temp. Might be a good idea to let it do its job by itself. Steca is not my favorite brand, but they have engineers to figure out this stuff so they can make a controller that can do it by itself.
Adding more PV power would be money well spent. Good bang for the buck.
No need to upgrade battery, controller, etc.
Just add the PV(s), mount, and some wire. That's cheap $/W.
Plus it will let the battery supply more power per day, especially in winter.
G-