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  • Sunking
    replied
    Joe quit using power supplies to test the CC. It is not going to tell you anything. For now float your batteries directly connecting your DC supply to the batteries.

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  • Sunking
    replied
    Originally posted by SOLAR_FL
    So under optimal conditions, with batteries charged to 100%, The batteries could deliver 30 amps for 6 hours?
    To 50% DOD. Golf carts are 48 volt.

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  • SOLAR_FL
    replied
    Originally posted by inetdog
    An MPPT CC will try to draw as much current as it can from the source, as long as it is within the needs of the battery. With panels, the current is limited and the CC will find that it gets the most power at Imp of the panels, but the panels will not be damaged when the CC tries to draw more current during the MPPT checking process. If the source is a fixed voltage power supply, the CC will try to draw more and more current until the supply shuts down to protect itself.
    With input from batteries, it could be even worse.
    You are right on the money, the batteries needed over 4 amps to charge, the switching supply fell short by near one full amp. and I found this by putting one of my linear 13.5 volt supplies that can deliver 30 amps into it. To my surprise, my Fluke said I was drawing 4.5 amps into the batteries, and the supply was outputting 4.6, or there about. Does that say that MPPT is working? The MPPT as I understand it is a bit more complicated than adjusting the output to something near the input. A smart engineer could design a controller to mimic that type of behavior. I would think it takes someone with a profound understanding of MPPT, and true solar panels to drive it to judge if it's working.

    The controller is charging my UPS batteries, and this will be the last test I do using them in that way.

    When I put the inverter/75 watt light bulb load on the controller, the current being drawn from the 30a supply jumps to 7.5 amps from about 5.3 amps. This controller does have a temperature probe that is supposed to be in close proximity to the batteries. So it uses battery temperature to decide what to do. I wonder if I warm the temp sensor, if it would eventually cut the charge to the batteries to protect them. I guess I could test that at some point over the weekend.
    The broken English instructions do say to put the sensor close to the batteries, so if they are not right close to the charger, use and extension cable to move it closer.

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  • inetdog
    replied
    Originally posted by SOLAR_FL
    I'm sure that the controller I am testing did not like the output of a 24 vdc switching supply in place of a solar panel, that was where the clicking noise was coming from. The supply could not run with the controller loading it, it was fine once I removed it. The next test I will do will be with the two panels connected to it. I hope to do that Saturday if it doesn't rain.
    An MPPT CC will try to draw as much current as it can from the source, as long as it is within the needs of the battery. With panels, the current is limited and the CC will find that it gets the most power at Imp of the panels, but the panels will not be damaged when the CC tries to draw more current during the MPPT checking process. If the source is a fixed voltage power supply, the CC will try to draw more and more current until the supply shuts down to protect itself.
    With input from batteries, it could be even worse.

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  • SOLAR_FL
    replied
    My second panel arrived today, so did the 100 feet of 10 gauge with connectors on both ends, and two H connectors to put my panels in parallel. I need to get some U channel to make a place to hold the panel so they face the sun for most of the day, and my two gold cart batteries. I think I have everything else I will need in the garage.
    Today I learned that compact fluorescent light bulbs do not like crappy modified wave inverters. It would not even flicker with 111 volts coming out of it.

    I'm sure that the controller I am testing did not like the output of a 24 vdc switching supply in place of a solar panel, that was where the clicking noise was coming from. The supply could not run with the controller loading it, it was fine once I removed it. The next test I will do will be with the two panels connected to it. I hope to do that Saturday if it doesn't rain.

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  • thastinger
    replied
    Originally posted by SOLAR_FL
    So under optimal conditions, with batteries charged to 100%, The batteries could deliver 30 amps for 6 hours? I would think that they use more than two of these in most gold carts.
    golf carts use 8 of them...and most suck them dry...which is why they don't last more than 3 years in golf cart application.

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  • SOLAR_FL
    replied
    Originally posted by Sunking
    Sorry Joe but the question is not cut and dry simple. At 6 hour discharge rate to 50% DOD with the Peukert factor calculated is 30 amps.
    So under optimal conditions, with batteries charged to 100%, The batteries could deliver 30 amps for 6 hours? I would think that they use more than two of these in most gold carts.

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  • Sunking
    replied
    Originally posted by SOLAR_FL
    20% or 50% of which value?

    My question was simpler than the answer.
    Sorry Joe but the question is not cut and dry simple. At 6 hour discharge rate to 50% DOD with the Peukert factor calculated is 30 amps.

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  • SOLAR_FL
    replied
    Originally posted by Naptown
    226 ah x .2 for a 20% DOD = 45.2 ah
    45.2/6= just over 7 amps
    The formula is the same for all discharge % just change the .2 to the DOD you want to use.
    Thanks Rich

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  • Naptown
    replied
    226 ah x .2 for a 20% DOD = 45.2 ah
    45.2/6= just over 7 amps
    The formula is the same for all discharge % just change the .2 to the DOD you want to use.

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  • SOLAR_FL
    replied
    Originally posted by Sunking
    Drained to what point?

    20% or 50%?

    20% or 50% of which value?

    My question was simpler than the answer. What is the maximum I can draw on a full charge for a duration of 6 hours? I think the answer I was looking for is measured in amps, or watts, so I was not expecting percentages.

    Tnx, Joe

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  • Sunking
    replied
    Drained to what point?

    20% or 50%?

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  • thastinger
    replied
    for 6 hours to not exceed a 20% DoD or totally drained?

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  • SOLAR_FL
    replied
    Originally posted by Sunking
    Joe as all things you get what you pay for.

    Trojan T-105. 6 volt 225 AH Golf Cart Batteries. They can deliver 100 amps no problem.
    US Battery US2200 6 volt 220 AH Golf Cart Batteries that can deliver 75 amps no problem
    The batteries I can get the easiest are made by Exide, and the model is GC2 GC-135 with these specs:

    6V 135 min @75 amps

    20hour rate 226 < this is the one you told me to pay attention to, right?

    So with two of these is series, what kind of load could I put on them for 6 hours? I tend to think it wil be really low, like 10 - 12 amps. Am I close?
    Tnx Joe

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  • SOLAR_FL
    replied
    The picture of the guts is a few frames up screen, the only thing you can't see are the Mosfets, or transistors that are up against the aluminum heat-sink on the back. I put a 24 volt DC supply on the solar side, and my UPS batteries on the battery side, and what I know is that my batteries have a full charge and the controller isn't doing too much. When I put my volt meter on the power supply coming in, the voltage was swinging up and down like it was being shorted, so I don't know what to think of that. The controller gets it operating voltage from the batteries. It has a load terminal that shows a picture of a light bulb, so I imagine it can turn the lights on and off via the one button that has a picture of a light bulb on it. I put a volt meter on the light bulb output, and I get 11 volts when it is off, and battery voltage when it is on. Maybe it has to have a load on it to pull it all the way down when it is off. Just a guess, but as I just tested it with an inverter, it does have to have a load. So I will put a small load on the inverter and cut the solar input off for a while to draw the batteries down. This is only for testing purposes, and to learn something about the charger. I hope to pick up some gold cart batteries by the weekend, they may not be Trojan because anyone I ask said they had to order them. Instead I may get the bigger Exide batteries I saw in the BJ's Club store this past weekend.
    With a 75 watt bulb on the inverter, the controller shows 6 amps going out, and my Fluke shows the same.

    I will upload a picture of the display as it sits right now with a 75 watt load on the inverter on the output of the controller. The instructions are for someone with more experience than I, but I should be able to test the MPPT function after the batteries are depleted a little more.

    Update: Attached first page of the data on the processor used in this controller. Comments welcomed.mpptproc.jpg
    The controller also has some sort of relay I can hear clicking at a rate of about once per second.
    Attached Files
    Last edited by SOLAR_FL; 09-04-2013, 09:52 PM. Reason: update

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