How can I calculate maximum "healthy" amp draw on a battery bank?
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Here is discharge chart for 50AH AGM battery (page 2, upper right). At 100A discharge rate it stays above 11V for about 8 minutes. This means, that you could plug a microwave into this battery, but it would leave you only 13AH of capacity. And I bet, that the battery would become really hot.
45977.pdfComment
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The tests pretty universally measure the voltage at the battery terminals, and load is adjusted to keep the same current flowing independent of battery voltage and wire resistance. To make a reproducible standard measurement you eliminate all of the variables. In a practical application you do not have that luxury.SunnyBoy 3000 US, 18 BP Solar 175B panels.Comment
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The tests pretty universally measure the voltage at the battery terminals, and load is adjusted to keep the same current flowing independent of battery voltage and wire resistance. To make a reproducible standard measurement you eliminate all of the variables. In a practical application you do not have that luxury.Comment
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Let's see what we have here in a real world aspplication: A pair of Trojan T-105 RE batteries wired in series using 6 inches of #6 AWG and compression connectors feeding a constant current load of 40 amps through 10-feet 1-way distance terminated with compression connectors. What is the voltage at the battery terminal and load?
Hint just the resistance of the #6 AWG is .001 Ohms which is 1/10th to 1/20th of the total resistance. Battery and connectors make up the rest.MSEE, PEComment
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Actual or Calculated discharge rate?
Hmmm,
Does healthy discharge rate mean the actual discharge rate or a calculated one? Meaning, does any charging offset the discharge rate?
100Ah AGM 12v battery has a healthy discharge rate of (C/4) 25A
If I'm drawing 40A and have 15A of charge going to the battery does that achieve the healthy 25A rate?
Won't last forever of course, but the question remains - is the "healthy" rate maintained while the capacity is available?
DaveComment
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Hmmm,
Does healthy discharge rate mean the actual discharge rate or a calculated one? Meaning, does any charging offset the discharge rate?
100Ah AGM 12v battery has a healthy discharge rate of (C/4) 25A
If I'm drawing 40A and have 15A of charge going to the battery does that achieve the healthy 25A rate?
Won't last forever of course, but the question remains - is the "healthy" rate maintained while the capacity is available?
Dave
1. If the batteries are fully charged up, there is a 40 amps load, and the panels have enough light and can actually supply 40 amps, then the panels will supply all the power and the batteries set idle regulate the voltage.
2. Same as above except the panels can only supply 30 amps, then 30 amps is supplied by the panels and the batteries make up for the shortage and are in discharge.
3. Same as above except it is dark and no panel power, the batteries supply all the power.
When you have a primary power source like the solar panels, and they are generating power, the energy has to go somewhere and equals out so that Power out = Power InMSEE, PEComment
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Gotcha ... the question then being: when batteries sit "idle" like that (with 30A output and 30A input) is that better for the batteries than to have them idle with zero output and zero input, or a trickle sort of charge?
The central question is about how many years a battery will remain functional. Is it better to use a battery within its "sweet spot" as determined by Peukert's law or is it better to not use them as much as possible?
3 to 5 years is a good guideline on how long it will be between battery replacements, I think. My brother believes you can maximize this by using the battery as little as possible, even not using them as much as possible. I contend that using the batteries minimally, under the Peukert's law "sweet spot", will maximize battery longevity.
DaveComment
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or a trickle sort of charge?
The central question is about how many years a battery will remain functional. Is it better to use a battery within its "sweet spot" as determined by Peukert's law or is it better to not use them as much as possible?
-minimal cycling
-cool temperatures
-maintenance at a fairly high state of charge (>75%)Comment
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Peukert law is demonstrated on page 1 PRODUCT SPECIFICATION under the table with 2 to 100 hour discharge rates. If discharged at the 2 hour rate (112 amps) the battery is rated at 146 amp hours. If discharged at the 100 hour rate (2.25 amps) is rated at 250 amp hours.
So back to your question what is the optimal discharge rate is a bit confusing to people. True Deep Cycle flooded lead acid batteries have fairly high internal resistances, and as you increase current flow th evoltage drops on the battery terminals. So for True Deep cycle batteries C/8 discharge current is about as high as you want to take before voltage drop becomes a serious issue. Same for charging because when you are pumping in current into that resistance causes the battery to heat up and you start to waste energy by burning off as heat which causes boiling of the electrolyte.
Sure you can draw a C/2 discharge from the battery listed of 112 amps, but the battery terminal voltage will be down around 3 volts on a 6 volt battery. That is not useful unless we are talking about a DC electric series wound motor. Use two of them in series for 12 volts on an inverter, and that inverter will quit working when the voltage drops to about 10.5 to 11 volts. So in this example a pair of T-105RE can supply about a 500 watt inverter. You can certainly try to run say a 2000 watt inverter and it would work for a while at high power levels but would shut down long before you expect it too.MSEE, PEComment
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.. 3 to 5 years is a good guideline on how long it will be between battery replacements, I think. My brother believes you can maximize this by using the battery as little as possible, even not using them as much as possible. I contend that using the batteries minimally, under the Peukert's law "sweet spot", will maximize battery longevity...
One other way to think about this is if I am looking at my batteries dying in 5 years anyway, why be super-nice to them if I only use them once a week and merely sip some capacity from them - leaving me with 1000's of cycles? The battery will die from old age first, wasting the power capabilities had you only used them. I suppose you could convince your brother to actually beef-up his consumption, and not worry about it so much.
The super conservative approach combined with old-age failure, may be a determining factor when deciding upon how much of a DOD you can withstand, if relatively few cycles are needed. Still, the best idea is to determine how much power he will be using, even if miniscule, to accurately size the battery required.Comment
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