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Grid Tie Battery Bank - AGM sealed or deep cell?
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Do you realize the cost of what you are proposing? Even Bill Gates would blink at that. -
Uh, lead acid batteries include:
GEL
AGM &
FLOODED types. So what you are looking at would be Flooded Lead Acid batteries, not AGM lead acid.
Without a generator, it will be impossible to save your batteries, if the grid fails & weather is bad, and you are not able to recharge the batteries. I have 3 backup generators, and 2 different chargers. Preserving the expensive batteries is paramount.
Bear with me here with my questions, If you had a grid tied "small solar farm" that was say, 50KW, and your home only needed a 2 KW array, and the battery bank was large, 10 days autonomy, couldn't in theory you go without a generator in that scenario? Maybe have a small micro wind turbine to plug-in if it snows for a month straight? There must be someone out there that oversized everything and sells back solar. A bit extreme but wondering if it can be done. If I build a homestead from the ground-up, that's what I'd want to do. Of course, in a more normal battery bank scenario, couldn't I just have the battery bank shut-off at 40% DOD until the power comes back on or some other safe level that would require weeks without power before the batter bank degrades?
Final question. Assuming no lower than 50% DOD is ideal for battery life, if you had the battery bank shut off at 35% DOD, how long will it take to drop to 50%, assume winter.
MrEnergyCzarLeave a comment:
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Uh, lead acid batteries include:
GEL
AGM &
FLOODED types. So what you are looking at would be Flooded Lead Acid batteries, not AGM lead acid.
Without a generator, it will be impossible to save your batteries, if the grid fails & weather is bad, and you are not able to recharge the batteries. I have 3 backup generators, and 2 different chargers. Preserving the expensive batteries is paramount.Leave a comment:
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MrEnergyCzarLeave a comment:
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My HOA tried to ban satellite dishes in the front yard. The rule was written back in the 80's when they were 6 feet in diameter and "ugly". Even though the dish is now only 1 foot in diameter they still try to enforce the rule. I told them they can't due to an FCC ruling saying no one is allowed to block or inhibit communication signals. The HOA backed down.Leave a comment:
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I have seen many generators that you can not even tell if they are running without looking closely - are they against zoning?Leave a comment:
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Because AGM batteries are very sensitive to positive plate growth when setting idle in float service, and not being cycled. Nor can they have an EQ charge applied to minimize the plate growth. AGM is damed if you use them, damned if you do not. In addition if not cycled when new the plates will never form correctly and reach their rated capacity. Batteries are just extremely bad news both for the pocket book and environment. You are not doing anyone or anythiong any favors using a battery system. Only person who will benefit is the one selling them to you and laughing all the way to the bank with your cash.
MrEnergyCzarLeave a comment:
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That's why, for just a couple days of backup, a modest 2-4KW genset & properly stored fuel, is the best solution. You can charge a 12V deep cycle battery, and use a small inverter to give you a couple lights all night, without the whine of the genset.Leave a comment:
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Because AGM batteries are very sensitive to positive plate growth when setting idle in float service, and not being cycled. Nor can they have an EQ charge applied to minimize the plate growth. AGM is damed if you use them, damned if you do not. In addition if not cycled when new the plates will never form correctly and reach their rated capacity. Batteries are just extremely bad news both for the pocket book and environment. You are not doing anyone or anythiong any favors using a battery system. Only person who will benefit is the one selling them to you and laughing all the way to the bank with your cash.Leave a comment:
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It is real simple.
1. First determine your daily Kwh usage. Say for example 5 Kwh.
2. Determine how many day of autonomy you want, then double that number so as to not ever discharge your battery more then 50%. In your example 4 days x 2 = 8 days.
3. Multiply Autonomy by Daily load to get total battery capacity. In your example 5000 wh x 8 = 40,000 wh or 40 Kwh
4. To find battery AH capacity = Watt Hours / Battery Voltage. So in this example 40,000 wh / 48 volts = 833 AH @ 48 volts.
5. Go broke buying batteries.
If using quality AGM batteries you can get up to around 2000 cycles or 3 to 5 years of service whichever comes first. A quality AGM battery manufacture are Concorde PVX Sun Extender series. Rolls does make AGM batteries but they are not suitable for RE system. For Rolls 4000 and 5000 series are RE batteries which are FLA.
MrEnergyCzarLast edited by russ; 01-13-2013, 09:12 PM.Leave a comment:
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It is real simple.
1. First determine your daily Kwh usage. Say for example 5 Kwh.
2. Determine how many day of autonomy you want, then double that number so as to not ever discharge your battery more then 50%. In your example 4 days x 2 = 8 days.
3. Multiply Autonomy by Daily load to get total battery capacity. In your example 5000 wh x 8 = 40,000 wh or 40 Kwh
4. To find battery AH capacity = Watt Hours / Battery Voltage. So in this example 40,000 wh / 48 volts = 833 AH @ 48 volts.
5. Go broke buying batteries.
If using quality AGM batteries you can get up to around 2000 cycles or 3 to 5 years of service whichever comes first. A quality AGM battery manufacture are Concorde PVX Sun Extender series. Rolls does make AGM batteries but they are not suitable for RE system. For Rolls 4000 and 5000 series are RE batteries which are FLA.Leave a comment:
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Grid Tie Battery Bank - AGM sealed or deep cell?
I know exactly how much power I use over a 4 day window excluding my plug-in Volt (40 KWH). I want a battery bank to cover me for this despite having a 5KW solar array back feeding the batteries during a power outage. This will cover me for more than 4 days. Since I'd be tied to the grid, would I get AGM sealed batteries? I don't want the maintenance. If the power went out 10 days per year, what kind of life could I expect from them? I have run numbers through the battery formulas but am confused regarding total amp hours recommended after using the formula and then taking that number and finding the proper battery. 48V bank. What is the best battery bank, brand, and specific size for what I need? I know the Rolls Surrettes are top batteries but can't figure out which ones and how many for my purposes. (I wouldn't be charging my Volt when the power goes out, as the draw would be too much and probably kill the batteries faster)
Thanks
MrEnergyCzarLast edited by russ; 01-13-2013, 09:12 PM.
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