Yes, you are correct the range is wider but I was referring to the flat part of the Lithium charge curve before the knee. If I recall correctly the Lead Acid discharge curve is more gradual toward the end and the Lithium is steeper. Isn't that why voltage is not as good an indicator of SOC in Lithium vs. Lead Acid? I am just comparing my miniscule experience with LFPs vs FLAs.
Tesla battery pack?
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Last edited by Ampster; 11-21-2018, 06:11 PM. -
No need to be argumentative. That was my point as well, though I did not make it clear. I was trying to distinguish between the measured value that comes from the CT or the shunt and the calculated value that displays Watts. I have plenty of both of those devices around my home.Leave a comment:
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The flattest Lithium Ion is LFP (LiFeP04), and in a 4S operation for 12 volts is 10 to 13.8 volts or a spread of 3.8 volts from 100% to 0% SOC. A 12 volt Pb FLA battery is 12.6 to 11.9 volts or a spread of 0.7 volts. Which is the Flatter Curve of the two? 0.7 volts or 3.8 volts? So how can you make that statement? It is complete nonsense.
Now you wanna talk about all the other Lithium batteries that have even Steeper curves. Pb batteries in my book from a charge curve POV is 542% flatter than LFP, and it only goes higher for all other lithium batteries. Pb batteries blow lithium out of the water with respect to discharge curves. It is no contest, Pb is far superior to any Lithium with respect to charge curves.
You need to reevaluate everything you think you know about lithium batteries, because from what you have expressed here so far is false, and leading you to the wrong conclusions.
FWIW commercial EV's do not use LFP batteries. Reason is because LFP Energy Density is not much better than Pb, and thus you could NOT get any meaningful range in an EV. They have to use much higher energy density cells which are much more volatile and prone to thermal runaway. Telsa uses the most unstable unsafe battery there is. It is the only way they can get the range, and requires extreme thermal management like liquid cooling and heater all of which use energy.Last edited by Sunking; 11-21-2018, 05:22 PM.Leave a comment:
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Don't forget Power Factor. Bruce RoeLeave a comment:
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It's like hauling ten cubic yards of dirt with your truck per hour. Doesn't have anything to do with the speed of the dirt, just how much dirt you haul in that time.Leave a comment:
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Yes, I understand that the voltage may vary significantly in that scenerio.. It is a bad habit I have working with low voltage Lithium which has a flatter charge curve. In a high voltage Lithium pack the voltage deltas would also be significant.
One could also point out that there aren't any shunts or clamps that measure Watts.Leave a comment:
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Kick it up to a 120 volt battery with a 10 amp charger. Same result, 100 amp hours but power and voltage are 10 times higher.
A very common mistake rookies and DIY's make is they fall for the BS claim Lithium Ion batteries are near 100% efficient with a range of 95 to 99% charge efficiency. The mistake is that is a Coulomb Efficiency, NOT ENERGY EFFICIENCY. Coulomb Efficiency is AMP HOURS, NOT Watt Hours. So what might you be missing leading you to the wrong conclusion? Think about it for a second.
Figured it out yet? Amp Hours go in (charge) at a HIGHER VOLTAGE than the Amp Hours going out (discharge) at a LOWER VOLTAGE. So for a LFP 4S we go inza at 14.4 jolts and goes outza at 12.8 jolts making energy efficiency 12.8/14.4 x 100 = 88%.Last edited by Sunking; 11-21-2018, 02:35 PM.Leave a comment:
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Yes, you are correct. I fall into the habit of using Watts because, as you say it is the end result of current times voltage.Leave a comment:
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Amp Hours = Amps x Hours
Amps = Amp Hours / Hours
Hours = Amp Hours / Amps.
Wattage has nothing to do with it other than an end result. Here is IEEE, BCI, and ANSI definition of C-Rate anyone can look up as you have failed to do.
C-Rate is a measure of the rate at which a battery is discharged relative to its maximum capacity. A 1C rate means that the discharge current will discharge the entire battery in 1 hour. For a battery with a capacity of 100 Amp-hrs, this equates to a discharge current of 100 Amps.
Power has nothing to do with the calculation.
So here a link for youLast edited by Sunking; 11-21-2018, 01:24 PM.Leave a comment:
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Perhaps only a good idea if the goal is to help perpetuate insults. Less so if the intended goal is real information exchange.Leave a comment:
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KiloWatts are what matter to understand the issue and relate to C rates. But there is a big range of battery capacities among Teslas (40 to 100 kWhr) and it is important to take battery capacity into consideration when looking at charging rates.Last edited by Ampster; 11-21-2018, 12:50 PM.Leave a comment:
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I can validate that statement regarding charging. When I charge my 90kWh at 48 Amps (12 kW) the compressor does not come on. When I charge at a supercharger at 88kW the compressor comes on. The supercharger rate is approximately 1C and the charge rate expressed in MPH is above 250.Leave a comment:
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I can validate that statement regarding charging. When I charge my 90kWh at 48 Amps (12 kW) the compressor does not come on. When I charge at a supercharger at 88kW the compressor comes on. The supercharger rate is approximately 1C and the charge rate expressed in MPH is above 250.Leave a comment:
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Let's stick with the facts and ignore the boorish behavior.
They operate at an average C < 1.0, but peak C is what matters when we want to understand why there is active cooling (glycol loops) in the design, because heat production goes with the square of C.
Tesla Model S charges at peak C of close to 1.4 in the lower portion of the charge envelope.
Tesla Model S discharges at peak C of roughly 4.5 on hard accelerations. It will regularly be at C > 2.0 when driving casually around town.
Someone charging at 0.5C produces 80 times less waste heat than the Model S flooring it off the line. At a more practical 0.25C to 0.4C for a house bank at scale, we're talking hundreds of times less heat.
The Tesla cooling compressor doesn't even turn on until ~125F, a temperature the pack won't reach in casual driving on a moderate day.
Finally, there are lots of people charging Tesla modules on their own at sub-C rates for ESS applications, and no one is really finding it necessary to hook up a pump and move coolant through the system. They just don't experience much ohmic heating.
So if someone tries to tell you EV batteries do not need the same protection because Solar Systems run at fractional C=Rate, tar and feather that Snake Oil salesman and run him out of town.Leave a comment:
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