quite large - the bay window front 3 panels are 6ft across.
I'd rate that as too small for November and here is why:
Suppose that you have 2 square metres. Best UK sunlight is 0.8 kW/m^2, so maximum 1.6kW. If overheated the sort pictured will re-radiate to sky, so no heat dump is needed. The house pictured is likely to want about 60kWh / day of heating in November (you replace with actual figures from the sum of your gas use plus electricity use.) On a bright-overcast day in November, 1/4 sunlight of about 0.2 kW/m^2 is more common. The party-killer: your due west orientation never gets good sun in November. If it were to get good sun, to get 60kWh in a six hour winter "day" should want 10kW average, so 50 square metres to do that when bright overcast. Nobody has that much roof space, so it is only going to deliver supplimentary free heating at sunny times.
Wanting "the bigger the better", I suggest keeping your existing and tank but rigging something south facing at 70 degrees incline in the back garden to drop more free solar heat into that same tank. For winter, the bigger the better, especially if you might throw a sheet over it next summer.
How far North are you and what was the coldest winter night temperature noticed in the past five years ? I ask because now that the climate has warmed up a bit, 1980's fears of freezing and cracked pipes in all the plumbing regulations might be less applicable than they used to be, unless you live north of a big dark hill near Aviemore.