A handy place where you can look up and calculate your data monthly/yearly, both by direction the panels face, their tilt, and if they are tracking or not is here:
http://rredc.nrel.gov/solar/codes_algs/PVWATTS/version1/
Was quite accurate for my location (near SF, CA).
You may also want to look at other than 12 volt system... 24 or 48 volt systems make the wiring job much smaller, and you can increase the ultimate panel capacity of your MX60 by 2x-4x...
Efficiency wise... The link I gave above accounts for panel and charge controller losses. Add in ~85% efficiency for inverter and ~80% for wet cell battery efficiency, you will get closer to your "useful" power output.
Example:
77% (from link) * 80% battery * 85% inverter = 53% overall panel rating to AC load efficiency...
The minimum useful panel to battery efficiency is that your panels should be about 3% of your battery capacity...
300AH*0.03= 9 amps or ~ 162 watts of panels (assuming little active use)
On the high side, about 10-15% is usually the recommended maximum panel size (more than that, the batteries cannot accept the current without overheating)... So, unless you have daytime loads, it is usually not worth the money to exceed that percentage of panels...
300aH*0.15=45 amps or ~810 watts (at 18 volts)...
Anyway, these are some rough rules of thumb that sort of bracket your system design and not hard and fast rules...
-Bill