Please Help me to understand FLA battery.

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  • ChrisOlson
    Solar Fanatic
    • Sep 2013
    • 630

    #16
    For folks wondering about PSOC cycling, there is standard that battery manufacturers can certify to for PSOC cycling for RE applications. Trojan, as far as I know, is the first to certify to it coming up with their latest marketing scheme called "Smart Carbon" in their batteries:


    Well, our Rolls batteries must have regular old Dumb Lead because PSOC cycling has not hurt them at all in 7 years. I got a new Swiss-made hydrometer called a Hydro Volt that MidNite Solar is marketing now as the MNHydrometer. I had to check this new thing out because it has built-in automatic temp compensating. Our batteries are at 24.7C so no temp compensating anyway. But I checked every cell with it to see what we got on our latest PSOC cycle where our batteries once again reached 85% SOC for the day before they started to discharge at nightfall again.

    Every single cell shows 1.242 - 1.245. Fully charged is 1.265 for our batteries. That pretty closely agrees with Rolls' published figures for 85% SOC SG. We use two-stage absorb/finish charging here with the finish stage at 2.58VPC, and consequently we never equalize because our cells never vary by more than 5-10 points after a full charge cycle.

    So I don't know exactly what Smart Carbon does. But I find it hard to believe that it's any better than good old Dumb Lead that has proven itself to work fine here on PSOC cycles time after time. As far as I'm concerned, these battery companies can come up with all sorts of BS market speak. But the basic technology in the flooded lead-acid battery has not changed in over 150 years.
    off-grid in Northern Wisconsin for 14 years

    Comment

    • Sunking
      Solar Fanatic
      • Feb 2010
      • 23301

      #17
      Originally posted by mapmaker
      With a single series string, a cell can go bad, but you'll know it right away.
      Not if a cell shorts out.
      MSEE, PE

      Comment

      • Sunking
        Solar Fanatic
        • Feb 2010
        • 23301

        #18
        Originally posted by ChrisOlson
        For folks wondering about PSOC cycling, there is standard that battery manufacturers can certify to for PSOC cycling for RE applications. Trojan, as far as I know, is the first to certify to it coming up with their latest marketing scheme called "Smart Carbon" in their batteries:
        Chris Lead Carbon batteries (PbC) is not marketing, it is a battery technology using Carbon in the negative electrode. The positive electrode is just like any Pb battery consisting of lead dioxide. However the negative electrode instead of being made of sponge lead is made of activated carbon. It still uses acid as the electrolyte.

        The whole point of PbC batteries is to enable PSOC where conventional Lead Acid batteries cannot without sulfation issues. Trojan is not the first to come out with PbC batteries, that honor goes to East Penn (DEKA division) and a new start up call Axion. The technology is targeted at the EV and utility scale storage.
        MSEE, PE

        Comment

        • ChrisOlson
          Solar Fanatic
          • Sep 2013
          • 630

          #19
          Originally posted by Sunking
          Chris Lead Carbon batteries (PbC) is not marketing
          It becomes marketing BS when you call it Smart Carbon. Carbon is dumber than a rock.
          off-grid in Northern Wisconsin for 14 years

          Comment

          • paulcheung
            Solar Fanatic
            • Jul 2013
            • 965

            #20
            So Chris, You tell me that you keep discharge your batteries from 85%SOC to 50% SOC and charge them back to 85%SOC repeat for days and have no problem with sulfation? what voltage do you set your absorption start? 48 volt system.

            Thank you

            Comment

            • ChrisOlson
              Solar Fanatic
              • Sep 2013
              • 630

              #21
              Originally posted by paulcheung
              So Chris, You tell me that you keep discharge your batteries from 85%SOC to 50% SOC and charge them back to 85%SOC repeat for days and have no problem with sulfation? what voltage do you set your absorption start? 48 volt system.
              Absolutely zero problems with sulfation - BUT we use three-stage bulk/absorb/finish charging, which most controllers can't do. Absorb V is 2.45VPC (58.8V). Finish V is 2.58VPC (61.9V) with net amp exit from finish stage at 2% C(20hr). XW solar controllers with firmware at or newer than V01.05.00-0006 can do three-stage bulk/absorb/finish charging with float at end of charge, or optional no-float end of charge.

              Edit:
              Absolutely zero problems with sulfation
              I should clarify this. If the battery has been in a short cycle (less than 2 days) it can reach 100% SOC in about 1.5 hours from start of absorb. A medium length cycle of 5 days or so will take 4-5 hours from start of absorb. If it has been in a long cycle (7-10 days or more) it can take two days to charge to 100%. The first day the 5 hour max timer will time out before it gets to 100% SOC. The second day might take an additional 3 hours or so to finish.

              That long time to get back to 100% SOC is the effect of sulfation on a long PSOC cycle. So when I say we have zero problems with it, I mean we have zero problems fully desulfating the battery to keep it healthy. Use of the normal 2.45-2.50VPC absorb charging will NOT charge a Rolls battery back to 100% after a long PSOC cycle. The higher voltage is necessary to achieve full 100% SOC. This can be accomplished with most controllers by using a EQ cycle set at recommended finish voltage instead of EQ voltage. But I like the XW controllers, and that's why I ended up switching from Classic 150's to the XW's - the XW system has quite precise net amp measurement capability and does not over-charge the battery. And the XW system does not have to be closely monitored to take care of the battery correctly with our cycle regimen, as is necessary when using an EQ stage in other controllers for the finish charge.

              So I'm not going to set here and tell you that we do will work for you. It takes the right equipment, and to have it set properly and calibrate the charging with a hydrometer over several cycles to make sure you have it set right. If you run several cycles and find that your system is exiting absorb and you got a couple cells that "lagging" at 1.250-1.255 then your finish voltage is not set high enough. If you let those "lazy" cells "lag" for a long time, guess what you got? A battery with a sulfated cell that now needs several hours of EQ to "fix" it.

              So setting up your system to run PSOC cycles by design is not a set it and forget it thing. It is a thing you manage every single day that you live with it. Some days you have to make the decision that, hey, the battery has gone two weeks and we're just not getting enough RE to charge these things up. So you end up running the prime genset for a few hours for two days in a row to take some of the load off the system so the solar can get them to 100% before they go too long.

              And it means continued monitoring with the hydrometer from time to time. Our TriMetric has a Days Since Equalized thing on it that flashes. I have that set for 60 days. When we notice it flashing that means it's time to run the batteries to a full 100% SOC, then whip out the hydrometer and check every cell and write down the readings in the logs to make sure they are all reaching 1.260-1.265.

              I guess these are the things that off-grid folks should be doing anyway, but few do. No matter what, living off-grid is more work (and way more expensive) than living with utility power and just throwing the switch. That's why I don't understand why some people have this desire to move off-grid when they got utility power. To do so is just plain ludicrous. There is no logical reason for it - you are inventing problems (and expense) that you don't have to have. Some say they want to do it in case the power goes out, and I say just buy a freakin' standby generator. The generator is WAY less expense and problems than what we have living off-grid full-time with batteries and solar panels et al. And us off-gridders STILL have to have a standby generator (or two or three).
              off-grid in Northern Wisconsin for 14 years

              Comment

              • mapmaker
                Solar Fanatic
                • Aug 2012
                • 353

                #22
                Originally posted by mapmaker
                With a single series string, a cell can go bad, but you'll know it right away.
                Originally posted by Sunking
                Not if a cell shorts out.
                OK. I was assuming that the operator would notice voltages were not right. Why is the voltage only 49.8 volts an hour after sundown? Why did the low voltage disconnect (which is set to 48.0) get triggered during the night? Doesn't everyone have a trimetric in the living room?

                I think I would notice a shorted cell pretty quick... but then I don't really know because I've never had one

                --mapmaker
                ob 3524, FM60, ePanel, 4 L16, 4 x 235 watt panels

                Comment

                • Sunking
                  Solar Fanatic
                  • Feb 2010
                  • 23301

                  #23
                  Originally posted by ChrisOlson
                  It becomes marketing BS when you call it Smart Carbon. Carbon is dumber than a rock.
                  It is not BS Chris. PbC is the real deal and changes a 3000 cycle battery to a over 10,000 to 100% DOD. They are the only lead acid battery that can work PSOC range without damage. They could easily knock Lithium out of the market. Kia motors has already tossed lithium out and uses PbC in their EV.

                  They are quite real and 4 manufactures are making them who are Furukawa DEKA, Axiom, and now Trojan. There is a ton of info from reliable sources out there I suggest you go look at them like this one from Sandia National Labs. If they can deliver half of what they claim is a Quantum leap in battery tech. Test results from Sandia indicate 30,000 cycles to 100% DOD.
                  MSEE, PE

                  Comment

                  • ChrisOlson
                    Solar Fanatic
                    • Sep 2013
                    • 630

                    #24
                    Originally posted by mapmaker
                    I think I would notice a shorted cell pretty quick... but then I don't really know because I've never had one
                    We had one on our old batteries many years back that shorted out. These days, with the equipment I got now, I'd notice it immediately because alarms would go off on battery monitors indicating the midpoint voltages aren't right. Back then I didn't notice it right away (24V system) and smoked the rest of the string because the shorted cell was just like completely removing it and running the whole string on 11 cells. Had three parallel strings and the two good strings handled all the loads on discharge, and the string with the dead cell took the gaff on charging and boiled all the water out of the 11 good ones. I didn't have a good battery service plan then, no logs, nothing. Didn't discover it until my wife said the batteries are going dead all the time, so checked water one day and had a whole string bone-ass dry (and 900 pounds of scrap lead).

                    That's one of them "live and learn" deals where you decide that the cost of a good battery monitor is less than a string of batteries. And even then I didn't put in a real battery monitor - I installed some cheap volt meters to keep track of the midpoint voltages. A couple months later I had another cell in another string go bad and the voltmeters caught that one. But it was too late - the bank was due for replacement because I only had one good string left, and stuck a used battery in where the second cell had failed. The next month was spent trying to come up with $10,000 to buy new batteries. And this time I spent the money on good monitors.

                    I've heard it said that all off-grid people go thru this - wreck your first set due to gross negligence to learn how to take care of the next set that cost more money.
                    off-grid in Northern Wisconsin for 14 years

                    Comment

                    • ChrisOlson
                      Solar Fanatic
                      • Sep 2013
                      • 630

                      #25
                      Originally posted by Sunking
                      It is not BS Chris. PbC is the real deal and changes a 3000 cycle battery to a over 10,000 to 100% DOD.
                      Sunking - my hope has always been that when our current batteries go south that they'd come up with something better to buy the next time. We're only in our early 50's and plan on living here at least the next 15 years yet before we give up on the rigors of the off-grid lifestyle and can't do it anymore. So I expect we'll have to buy one more bank of batteries at some point. By the time we retire from off-grid living, they'll probably have the cat's meow in batteries, making all the money we spent to live here for 30 years look ridiculous (which it is probably is now).
                      off-grid in Northern Wisconsin for 14 years

                      Comment

                      • mapmaker
                        Solar Fanatic
                        • Aug 2012
                        • 353

                        #26
                        Originally posted by ChrisOlson
                        We had one on our old batteries many years back that shorted out.
                        <snip>
                        Had three parallel strings and the two good strings handled all the loads on discharge, and the string with the dead cell took the gaff on charging and boiled all the water out of the 11 good ones.
                        That was my point earlier... you notice these things much sooner if you have only one string...there are no other strings to mask the problem.

                        --mapmaker
                        ob 3524, FM60, ePanel, 4 L16, 4 x 235 watt panels

                        Comment

                        • ChrisOlson
                          Solar Fanatic
                          • Sep 2013
                          • 630

                          #27
                          Originally posted by mapmaker
                          That was my point earlier... you notice these things much sooner if you have only one string...there are no other strings to mask the problem.
                          Yep. A good battery monitor with midpoint sensing can keep track of multiple strings for you. And that's what we have now - two of them. It's actually best to have a monitor on each string if you run lots of parallel strings (or buy a PentaMetric that can track three strings). The nice thing about a good battery monitor is that it keeps a detailed history so if there is a warranty problem you have the data (along with your logs) to back up your warranty claim. Without the detailed data that shows everything that has gone on with your batteries, you are pretty much screwed on warranty no matter what company you deal with. I've heard that Trojan is reasonable on warranty claims. But Rolls is most definitely not - sometimes taking two months to process a claim on a defective battery or cell where good records have not been kept, and flat out denying some claims. If you have detailed logs and data Rolls will process a warranty claim much faster.
                          off-grid in Northern Wisconsin for 14 years

                          Comment

                          • paulcheung
                            Solar Fanatic
                            • Jul 2013
                            • 965

                            #28
                            Originally posted by Sunking
                            It is not BS Chris. PbC is the real deal and changes a 3000 cycle battery to a over 10,000 to 100% DOD. They are the only lead acid battery that can work PSOC range without damage. They could easily knock Lithium out of the market. Kia motors has already tossed lithium out and uses PbC in their EV.

                            They are quite real and 4 manufactures are making them who are Furukawa DEKA, Axiom, and now Trojan. There is a ton of info from reliable sources out there I suggest you go look at them like this one from Sandia National Labs. If they can deliver half of what they claim is a Quantum leap in battery tech. Test results from Sandia indicate 30,000 cycles to 100% DOD.
                            Are these batteries readily available now? at what price range? Thanks

                            Comment

                            • Sunking
                              Solar Fanatic
                              • Feb 2010
                              • 23301

                              #29
                              Originally posted by paulcheung
                              Are these batteries readily available now? at what price range? Thanks
                              Trojan is the only one available to the public. All the others are utility, government utility, military, and EV manufactures only at this time.

                              Well if you can afford a production run they might sell to John Doe Public.
                              MSEE, PE

                              Comment

                              • paulcheung
                                Solar Fanatic
                                • Jul 2013
                                • 965

                                #30
                                Is the only industrial and premium brand on Trojan batteries are using the active carbon for negative plates? I know the industrial line, but which is the premium line?

                                Thank you.

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