Battery max charge rate
Wis03Blade
Registered Users Posts: 20 ✭
Someone please tell me who is correct... My installer set my MPPT60 (Both) charge controllers for 54.0 max charge , my battery guy said that they should be set for 60.0 volts max charge the batteries are Trojan L16RE-B 6 volt flooded ,( top of battery reads : 410 Ah@100Hr, 370 Ah@20Hr, 340Ah@10hr.) running on a 48v system with Genset Backup. There are 16 batteries, two rows or 8 wired in series (positive to negative) then paralleled at the ends ( the negatives on each end of the row of 8 are connected together then it runs to the to the breaker, and the positive on the other ends connected together then to the breaker) I have two MPPT60 chargers feeding the batteries,( 15-240W Panels on each charge controller) both feeding that single (eventually split) feed to the battery bank. The battery guy said that each MPPT60 should be charging a single row of 8 , 6Volt batteries wired in series, and each row of 8 should then go into the wiring box separately, then to the inverter.
Xantrex MPPT60 settings currently: Stop Adsorb <enabled> Stop V <disabled> start load <10.0A> stop load<7.0A> Batt Type<Flooded> Batt Capc<740Ah> max charge rate <100%> charge cycle<3 stage> max charge<54.0V> mppt ref volts <150.0V>
HELP.
Xantrex MPPT60 settings currently: Stop Adsorb <enabled> Stop V <disabled> start load <10.0A> stop load<7.0A> Batt Type<Flooded> Batt Capc<740Ah> max charge rate <100%> charge cycle<3 stage> max charge<54.0V> mppt ref volts <150.0V>
HELP.
Comments
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Re: Battery max charge rate
The settings depend on how you use your batteries. Is your system tied to the grid or is it off-grid? What kind of inverter do you have? -
Re: Battery max charge rate
Off Grid System, Xantrex XW6048 120 at 60 amps -
Re: Battery max charge rateWis03Blade wrote: »Off Grid System, Xantrex XW6048 120 at 60 amps
Looks like you've got a newer version of MPPTs, because there's no "Stop Absorb" or "Stop V" or "Max Charge" on my MPPT. Other settings seem to be the same. But if you don't find things that I'm taking about, that could be why.
Go to SCP and look through the MPPT menu. If you see "Basic Settings", click "enter"+"up"+"down" simulatneously. Once you do, "Basic Settings" will cahnge to "Advanced Settings". Click on "Advanced Settings" then select "Charger Settings"
Change "Batt Type" to "Custom", then go to "Custom Menu". There you will find a set of voltages that control charging.
Set "Float Voltage" to 52.8 (Trojan recommended). Set both "Bulk Voltage" and "Absorb Voltage" to 58.8 - that's the upper end of what Trojan recommends.
Then go back to "Charger Settings" and set "ReCharge Volts" as low as possible.
If the network is set up correctly, it'll change settings for the other MPPT too.
With these settings, it'll work as follow:
- In the morning it'll wake up in "Bulk" stage. At this stage it tries to produce as much as it can.
- Then as batteries charge and reach 58.8V, it'll move to the "Absorb" stage. At this mode it'll dial down the production not to exceed 58.8V
- Once batteries are charged enough (you'll need to work on this later), it'll go to "Float" stage. The controller will only produce enough to cover your loads.
You can wake up tomorrow and watch how it goes. You need to make sure that it goes through these 3 charging stages. It's a good idea to measure how long the absorbtion took.
The setting depend on the batteries, and all batteries are different. To figure out if your settings are good for them, you need to measure specific gravity (with Hydrometer). You wait until they're on the Float stage and then measure few cells. I think, they should be at 1.277 for your batteries. If they're lower than this, they need more charging.
Does that all make sense? -
Re: Battery max charge rate
Makes sense, my WX MPPT60 have all that, the other info is off the control panel that displays the main stuff, and has the gen start plugged into it. Check the gravity once they are fully charged ( according to the display) and check all cells, or just a select few? I should be able to see how long each took by the MPPT menu , correct? -
Re: Battery max charge rateWis03Blade wrote: »Makes sense, my WX MPPT60 have all that, the other info is off the control panel that displays the main stuff, and has the gen start plugged into it. Check the gravity once they are fully charged ( according to the display) and check all cells, or just a select few? I should be able to see how long each took by the MPPT menu , correct?
When I got batteries, I had a lot of troubles with them because they didn't want to charge correctly. Unlike Trojan's support, people on this forum helped me a lot. So, I spent two months running back and forth with hydrometer measuring my SGs. I had measurement of all the cells at comissioning, and I do them all once a month or two. But when I needed to figure out the best way to charge them, I could only do 3 pilot cells. I selected the best one, the worst one, and one at the middle, although the difference between them was very small.
I'd say it's very important to fugure out the best charging settings from the beginning.
XW doesn't show the duration of absorption stage, only float, so you would need to watch.
I don't have Xantrex AGS. SCP has separate settings for each device, so AGS will have different settings. And generator will charge batteries through XW6048, which has totally separate settings from SCCs. Starting generator at correct times is important. It depends on your loads. Feeding loads directly from the generator in pass-through mode saves almost 50% of energy compared to charging batteries with the generator then feeding loads from the batteries. Therefore, it's good to run it when you do have some heavy loads. But it requires some creativity in AGS settings. -
Re: Battery max charge rateWis03Blade wrote: »Stop Adsorb <enabled> Stop V <disabled> start load <10.0A> stop load<7.0A> Batt Type<Flooded> Batt Capc<740Ah> max charge rate <100%> charge cycle<3 stage> max charge<54.0V> mppt ref volts <150.0V>
HELP.
Hi Wis03Blade - I just talked to you on the phone a bit ago.
The above settings you noted are for your AGS (Auto Gen Start) for your Kohler generator, and not for the MPPT60 charge controllers. NorthGuy covered the proper settings for your MPPT60's and batteries pretty good, so no sense going over that again.
I'm a little concerned about your generator settings though. I assume that Load has to be disabled or your generator will be running all the time. If you look in the AGS menu under Cfg Triggers you should see this all the way to the bottom:
Attachment not found.
Set the Start Load to what you're comfortable with, and that is point where the XW will start the generator based on load on the system. So, for instance, if you would like to have the inverter/AGS start your generator when the load gets to 3,600 watts, set that for 30 amps. The Start Load and Stop Load triggers are based on the sum of the current on L1 and L2, not the current on the highest leg like all other amp settings. So this would be the same as 15 amps on each leg, or 15 x 240V = 3,600 VA. Now, if you want the inverter to start the generator at that load, set the Load from Disabled to Enabled.
When the load exceeds this level, the inverter will wait for 5 minutes and if the load remains above 30 amps total on the two legs, it will start the generator and use the generator until the load drops below the amps you have set for Stop Load.
I set Start Load to the maximum continuous capacity of our standby generator because I can then use the generator at its full rated capacity and have the generator take the first 3,600 watts of load off the RE system. Like we talked about on the phone, this is very important for winter time when you don't have enough solar power to keep your battery charged up. Using this feature makes the generator supply the peak load power, conserving on battery energy so the battery energy can be used to power the lighter loads thru the night instead of waking up in the morning with the batteries sacked out and having to use the generator to charge them back up.
There is another setting in there for Generator Support and this will be important if you get a smaller diesel generator for prime power to get you thru our long Wisconsin winter nights. You have my phone number, so feel free to call me if and when you get to that point and I can help you get it set up so you can enjoy your Wisconsin winter off-grid experience
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Chris -
Re: Battery max charge rateChrisOlson wrote: »Hi Wis03Blade - I just talked to you on the phone a bit ago.
....... You have my phone number, so feel free to call me if and when you get to that point and I can help you get it set up so you can enjoy your Wisconsin winter off-grid experience Chris
Chris - you are the man! I appreciate all the help you give in your posts. MikePowerfab top of pole PV mount | Listeroid 6/1 w/st5 gen head | XW6048 inverter/chgr | Iota 48V/15A charger | Morningstar 60A MPPT | 48V, 800A NiFe Battery (in series)| 15, Evergreen 205w "12V" PV array on pole | Midnight ePanel | Grundfos 10 SO5-9 with 3 wire Franklin Electric motor (1/2hp 240V 1ph ) on a timer for 3 hr noontime run - Runs off PV ||
|| Midnight Classic 200 | 10, Evergreen 200w in a 160VOC array ||
|| VEC1093 12V Charger | Maha C401 aa/aaa Charger | SureSine | Sunsaver MPPT 15A
solar: http://tinyurl.com/LMR-Solar
gen: http://tinyurl.com/LMR-Lister , -
Re: Battery max charge rateWis03Blade wrote: »Makes sense, my WX MPPT60 have all that, the other info is off the control panel that displays the main stuff, and has the gen start plugged into it. Check the gravity once they are fully charged ( according to the display) and check all cells, or just a select few? I should be able to see how long each took by the MPPT menu , correct?
If you are grid tied and sell to the grid, you need to have 'Advanced Interactive Mode' activated if you want your batteries to ever get a absorption charge of any kind while selling to the grid. This is done by setting Grid Support volts (advanced setting on inverter) to equal the equalization voltage. -
Re: Battery max charge rate
Thanks for all the help, doing changes now. Question on the wiring hooked up to the actual battery lugs... It is now running from end of row one, to the other row then from that lug on the second row to the inverter. won't the wire running from the initial (main) wire have extra resistance going to the other bank of batteries, thus picking the least path of resistance and feed the bank that it is hooked up to first , slightly ignoring the lead coming off that lug then going to the other bank of 8? My electrician said I should get even length (exact same size as now) come off each bank both positive and negative then connect them off the battery to each other and the lead going to the wiring distribution box , this method seams correct ----input please. -
Re: Battery max charge rate
read this long article http://www.smartgauge.co.uk/batt_con.html
and connect your batteries on the diagonal. Your electrician will likely instantly understand it.Powerfab top of pole PV mount | Listeroid 6/1 w/st5 gen head | XW6048 inverter/chgr | Iota 48V/15A charger | Morningstar 60A MPPT | 48V, 800A NiFe Battery (in series)| 15, Evergreen 205w "12V" PV array on pole | Midnight ePanel | Grundfos 10 SO5-9 with 3 wire Franklin Electric motor (1/2hp 240V 1ph ) on a timer for 3 hr noontime run - Runs off PV ||
|| Midnight Classic 200 | 10, Evergreen 200w in a 160VOC array ||
|| VEC1093 12V Charger | Maha C401 aa/aaa Charger | SureSine | Sunsaver MPPT 15A
solar: http://tinyurl.com/LMR-Solar
gen: http://tinyurl.com/LMR-Lister , -
Re: Battery max charge rate
I have already read the link. Battery inter connection not the issue. My 6 volt batteries are connected from positive to negative in each bank of 8 , giving me the needed 48 volts for my system. I'm referring to where the two banks are interconnected with each other before exiting the battery box . At both ends, both the banks are connected to each other and go to the wiring distribution box. I'm curious if the fact that the main wire coming in is connected directly to one terminal on the battery bank in one row then off that terminal to the other bank of batteries, instead of connecting the two with exact length wires branching off the primary feed wire , then to both battery terminals .Isn't the battery row with the extra wire leaving bank one with the primary wire attached dealing with added resistance? Therefore giving the bank with the primary wire the charging advantage ? I'm aware that the positive comes off one bank and the negative off the other end of the second bank . If I make sure that the wiring connecting the two banks of 8 are using the exact same amount of wire, there is no longer a bank that has additional "wire" resistance, Is my thinking correct? -
Re: Battery max charge rate
No, there's nothing wrong with your setup. You have the positive to the bus off one string and the negative off the other. It does no good to run two more wires unless the existing wiring is under sized for the amps. There's a lot of myths concerning parallel connections on batteries. And the continued propagation of these myths as "fact" does not make them come true.
Read the attached PDF.
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Chris -
Re: Battery max charge rateChrisOlson wrote: »No, there's nothing wrong with your setup. You have the positive to the bus off one string and the negative off the other. It does no good to run two more wires unless the existing wiring is under sized for the amps. There's a lot of myths concerning parallel connections on batteries. And the continued propagation of these myths as "fact" does not make them come true.
There's one place in this article when they're completely incorrect - that's where they talk about shorted cells.
If a cell shorts, it effectively makes the string one cell shorter. For example, you had a string of 6 cells, and one of them shorts. It's the same as if you had a 5-cell string. If you had two strings, now your strings are uneven, one has 6 cells, but the other only 5.
The total voltage is divided evenly between batteries, so if total voltage is V then each cell in 6-cell string will see V/6 voltage, but the cell in 5-cell string will see higher voltage - V/5.
When you charge, you set the absorbtion voltage to say 2.45V/cell, or 14.7V per bank. This works well for 6-cell string, but the cells in the 5-s will see much higher voltage - 14.7/5 = 2.94V/cell, which is way above the equalization voltage. This will certainly overcharge batteries and may damage them. This, however, may happen to a single string setup as well.
When you discharge, batteries in the 5-cell string will not even begin discharging until battery voltage drops to 2.15V/cell, which is 10.75V per bank. At this point, the other string will be at 10.75/6 = 1.79V, that is completely discharged. So, only 6-cell string will be discharged, which will most likely over-discharge it. If you had a single string, you would notice the voltage drop right away, but here the "healthy" 6-cell string masks it.
So, shorted cell in one string will cause over-charging of this string and overdischarging of other strings, which may go unnoticed for a long time until the bank is totally destroyed. -
Re: Battery max charge rateWhen you charge, you set the absorbtion voltage to say 2.45V/cell, or 14.7V per bank. This works well for 6-cell string, but the cells in the 5-s will see much higher voltage - 14.7/5 = 2.94V/cell, which is way above the equalization voltage. This will certainly overcharge batteries and may damage them. This, however, may happen to a single string setup as well.
That happens whether you got a single string or parallel strings. What Jim was talking about was strings discharging into other parallel strings. If one has a shorted cell, the string voltage is lower on that string. So the other strings will discharge into the string with a shorted cell until an equilibrium is reached. And during charging the charging current is higher on the string with the shorted cell.
When I comes to paralleling batteries, we got 6 parallel strings on our house bank. Every winter I've scrounged up all the batteries out of our boats and camper, lug 'em into the utility room, series 'em up and hook 'em in tandem with the big batteries on the house bank. I exercise them all winter - batteries that aren't even the same age and same size between the strings. I got 7 years out of the cheap $65 apiece trolling motor batteries in our little boat doing that. Most people can't get 3 or 4 years out of those cheap deep cycles and they're junk. It does stress those little 12V deep cycles a bit because I run them up to 15.7 - 16.0 volts during absorb. But when they go back in the boats and the camper in the spring, one problem they definitely do not have is sulfated plates
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Chris -
Re: Battery max charge rateChrisOlson wrote: »Read the attached PDF.
Thanks for posting that. The article mostly pertains to stationary telecom batteries which spend most of their life in float, with occasional deep discharges. Under those circumstances parallel batteries are more stable. The problem with parallel batteries is the uneven cycling. RE batteries do a lot of cycling, much of it relatively shallow.
There are a number of caveats towards the end of the article, here is one:It can become an issue, however, for a system that is designed for long discharges, but is subjected to frequent shallow discharges. In this case, the high-rate battery will receive the brunt of the cycling duty and may age prematurely as a result.
Lots of folks use parallel batteries with reasonable success. As the batteries diverge with age, the cycling causes the higher capacity batteries to do most of the work. Thus the lower capacity batteries force the higher capacity batteries down to their level. Finally, when one cell shorts, it takes down the entire bank before it is noticed and corrected.
I think the point of the article is that if there is not much cycling, there is not much problem with parallel battery banks.
--vtMaps4 X 235watt Samsung, Midnite ePanel, Outback VFX3524 FM60 & mate, 4 Interstate L16, trimetric, Honda eu2000i -
Re: Battery max charge rateI think the point of the article is that if there is not much cycling, there is not much problem with parallel battery banks.
Yes. Parallel strings is no problem for RE batteries either. Ideally a person should have a battery monitor on each string to measure amp-hours in and out of the string to detect problems caused by a failed or failing battery in the string and correct it before it becomes a real problem. And parallel strings does increase the number of cells that must be serviced. But for high capacity systems it also reduces the Peukert Effect at high discharge rates with the inverter at full load.
So there's pros and cons. But most any high-capacity off-grid system I've ever seen uses several parallel strings because there's a practical limit to how big they can build 2V cells. And people that have a high capacity off-grid system typically want to be able to use the inverter at full load without getting excessive voltage sag - and that takes parallel connections to do it.
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Chris -
Re: Battery max charge rateChrisOlson wrote: »Yes. Parallel strings is no problem for RE batteries either. Ideally a person should have a battery monitor on each string to measure amp-hours in and out of the string to detect problems caused by a failed or failing battery in the string and correct it before it becomes a real problem. And parallel strings does increase the number of cells that must be serviced. But for high capacity systems it also reduces the Peukert Effect at high discharge rates with the inverter at full load.
So there's pros and cons. But most any high-capacity off-grid system I've ever seen uses several parallel strings because there's a practical limit to how big they can build 2V cells. And people that have a high capacity off-grid system typically want to be able to use the inverter at full load without getting excessive voltage sag - and that takes parallel connections to do it.
--
Chris
Parallel strings in a well engineered system are not a problem. But when neophytes use welding cable and lugs, 11" hand crimpers, and hook a bunch of batteries in parallel, not knowing what a monitor is, leads to disappointments. And buying more batteries to add the next year. I think the smartgauge site explains the issues of small resistances causing large amperage deltas in parallel strings is the best resource to convey this issue.Powerfab top of pole PV mount | Listeroid 6/1 w/st5 gen head | XW6048 inverter/chgr | Iota 48V/15A charger | Morningstar 60A MPPT | 48V, 800A NiFe Battery (in series)| 15, Evergreen 205w "12V" PV array on pole | Midnight ePanel | Grundfos 10 SO5-9 with 3 wire Franklin Electric motor (1/2hp 240V 1ph ) on a timer for 3 hr noontime run - Runs off PV ||
|| Midnight Classic 200 | 10, Evergreen 200w in a 160VOC array ||
|| VEC1093 12V Charger | Maha C401 aa/aaa Charger | SureSine | Sunsaver MPPT 15A
solar: http://tinyurl.com/LMR-Solar
gen: http://tinyurl.com/LMR-Lister , -
Re: Battery max charge rateParallel strings in a well engineered system are not a problem. But when neophytes use welding cable and lugs, 11" hand crimpers, and hook a bunch of batteries in parallel, not knowing what a monitor is, leads to disappointments. And buying more batteries to add the next year. I think the smartgauge site explains the issues of small resistances causing large amperage deltas in parallel strings is the best resource to convey this issue.
Absolutely. If you need 1,200 amp-hours at a particular system voltage it's cheaper to buy 1,200ah 2V cells and series them. So people who build parallel battery arrangements, like we did for high capacity amp delivery to the bus to run a big inverter at full load, should realize up front that it's a high maintenance bank and it's more expensive to do it that way.
But people saying you can't do it, or it don't work in the long term, is a myth. We have zero problems with six parallel strings. And we get awesome amp delivery to our inverter with little or no voltage sag for hours on end if we need to. You simply can't achieve that with just one string.
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Chris -
Re: Battery max charge rateChrisOlson wrote: »Absolutely. If you need 1,200 amp-hours at a particular system voltage it's cheaper to buy 1,200ah 2V cells and series them. So people who build parallel battery arrangements, like we did for high capacity amp delivery to the bus to run a big inverter at full load, should realize up front that it's a high maintenance bank and it's more expensive to do it that way.
But people saying you can't do it, or it don't work in the long term, is a myth. We have zero problems with six parallel strings. And we get awesome amp delivery to our inverter with little or no voltage sag for hours on end if we need to. You simply can't achieve that with just one string.
--
Chris -
Re: Battery max charge rateChrisOlson wrote: »That happens whether you got a single string or parallel strings. What Jim was talking about was strings discharging into other parallel strings. If one has a shorted cell, the string voltage is lower on that string. So the other strings will discharge into the string with a shorted cell until an equilibrium is reached.
The string voltage is the same for all parallel strings. If you decide to measure it, you'll find out that you put your voltmeter to the same place, so the string voltage is the same for every string. But the voltage per cell will be higher in the string with a shorted cell because the same string volage is divided between lesser number of cells.
The only way the voltage of a battery can get above 2.15V/cell is charging. The only way the voltage of a battery can get below 2.15V/cell is if the battery is discharging or is already discharged.
It will be quite common situation when the voltage of the string with the sorted cell will be above 2.15V/cell while the voltage in the intact cell will be below that level. When this happens, the full string will be discharging into the string with a shorted cell.
The author of the article labeled this as a myth. This is not a myth - pure mathematics.
I'm not trying to say that people shouldn't use parallel string, just pointing out to the error in the paper. -
Re: Battery max charge rate
If you have two or three parallel strings and design each string to pass the maximum planned current (discharging/charging), you should be OK with parallel connections (at least on the wiring side).
In larger computers, it is very common to parallel the wiring to carry more current than a single wire by itself can (limited space, using "cost effective" connectors, etc. usually limits us to relatively small awg wiring--and you can have a lot of current at 12v/5v/3.3v/etc.).
When I had to repair/redesign wiring and connectors that failed (charged connectors and/or wiring)--It was actually the "best connections/paths" that failed first. Which ever circuit path had the lowest resistance overheated first--Remember that Power=I2R. So self heating goes up with the square of the current. If you have two strings of batteries and one string has "a problem" (open cell, dirty/loose connection), the other string will carry 2x the "normal current" and the wiring will get 4x heating effect.
Battery current sharing is "stable" when discharging... I.e., when batteries get hot, their output voltage falls a bit, and tends to "unload" (output less current into the shared load).
However, battery current sharing is somewhat "unstable" when charging under heavy current. When the same battery (or battery string) gets hotter than the rest, its voltage falls a bit, and it wants to accept more current than these rest of the strings. Which gets it hotter, more current, etc.
So, my caveat is--If you decide to have parallel strings of batteries, make sure that you have heavy/balanced wiring to keep currents balanced as much as practical--And you should have a fuse/breaker per string if you have parallel strings to protect against short circuits.
And, I would highly suggest that a person gets an DC Current Clamp DMM (again, here is a cheap one that works "good enough") and monitor the current in each parallel battery string and look for unbalanced current during heavy charging/discharging. If you see >50% spread between the high current and low current string, you may have a problem that needs to be addressed.
I can understand people wanting two parallel strings for redundancy. I still believe that lots of paralleled strings are a pain in the rear end to maintain (watering, checking connections, etc.). And that, at least initially, if you follow my recommendations about heavy wiring and fuse/breaker per string, are not cheap to install.
But, I do agree, that if you need/want to parallel your battery strings--It is not the end of the world either. It is just more work to maintain.
I believe the Chris said that he disconnects his banks and rotates the re-distributes the batteries physically in the strings... That is a lot of work, and for him, seems to be working well to do that.
We have have more than a few posters here that say they seem to have batteries that fail in one position in their strings more often than others--And they shuffle batteries too.
Just remember to use insulated tools (tape on wrench handles) and were safety goggles/old cloths when doing this. Batteries can be dangerous if miss-handled.
-BillNear San Francisco California: 3.5kWatt Grid Tied Solar power system+small backup genset -
Re: Battery max charge rate
Take it from someone who lives in the real world: parallel battery strings can indeed cause problems. These problems are a result of unequal resistance in the strings causing differences in current flow during both charging and discharging. It is not a problem that shows up immediately: the batteries do not "balance out" but rather the imbalance increases over time. Lower Voltage systems will suffer more than higher Voltage ones for any resistance difference in the strings. More strings in parallel will be worse than fewer (two is rarely a problem at all even on low Voltage). Needless to say unequal wire length per string and/or bad connections will exacerbate the condition. (A failed cell in a battery is another situation and should not be included when discussing the viability of paralleling because it will cause trouble in any case.)
This does not mean parallel battery strings can't/won't work. It means that there can be potentially more problems than with a single string. It is not a myth. It is physics and the law of probability (the more complex something is the more likely it can go wrong). -
Re: Battery max charge rate
I should also add--That many folks tend to think that massively paralleling devices together makes for a more reliable system.
In general, it does not. It actually can make for a less reliable (over all) system). You have 4x as much of anything, the over all chances of failure are 4x as much.
Yes, if you have two parallel strings and one fails for some reason (open/shorted cell), you can limp along with one string until you get a replacement. However--An open or shorted cell can be missed if people are not doing performing inspections (using a DMM to measure the voltage across each cell/battery in a bank, using an DC clamp meter to measure charging/discharging current, etc.).
One of the major headaches with parallel redundancy (N+1 in the engineering world, N is the number needed operate, +1 is the spare). You need to detect when one member of "N" fails and fix it--As that failed member can damage others in the cluster or you have have several N's fail, and not have the redundancy when needed.
A poster here went another method for their redundancy... He had a 48 volt battery bank made from 2 volt cells. When one cell failed, he simply made a 46 volt battery bank and cranked back the charger by ~2 volt. Everything worked well enough that he could operate normally until he received a replacement cells in a couple weeks (or months?).
Which brings up another issue of going with "high voltage" battery banks. You have a 12 volt battery bank and one cell fails--Your bank is at 10 volts nominal and nothing works. (10.5 volts is cutoff for a typical inverter).
You have a 48 volt battery bank and one cell fails, you have 46 volts and things still work sort of OK (42 volts is cutoff). But there is the possibility of that shorted cell overheating or discharging parallel connected strings (in a redundant power system, we would usually use diodes or FETs to isolate the outputs in case a supply shorted internally).
With parallel strings, proper inspections and maintenance becomes even more important to ensure that you have high reliability and good overall battery bank life.
-BillNear San Francisco California: 3.5kWatt Grid Tied Solar power system+small backup genset -
Re: Battery max charge rate
Take it from someone who lives in the real world and makes a living doing it: All battery configurations can have problems if they are not set up right and properly maintained. Of course, I wouldn't have a job if there wasn't problems. Most of my customers get 5-7 years out of a set of paralleled GC-2's ( 8-12 Batteries ) they paid $500-$1000 for and they seen to be happy. -
Re: Battery max charge rateIt will be quite common situation when the voltage of the string with the sorted cell will be above 2.15V/cell while the voltage in the intact cell will be below that level. When this happens, the full string will be discharging into the string with a shorted cell.
No NG, I am afraid you are wrong on that. In our old bank we had one battery that went shorted on a cell and the other strings never discharged into the bad string. It just made the good strings work harder because of the difference in amp-hour capacity between the strings. You need to have voltage differential between strings to get current to flow from one to the other. And there is never any voltage differential between parallel strings when they're all connected to the same bus, even when you have one string with a bad, dead, or totally shorted cell. I have been running lots of parallel strings since basically the word "go" in my off-grid life. And I have yet to see a good string discharge into a bad one.
So I believe that Jim's assessment of that myth is spot on, based on my experience with it. All the bad string does is make the good strings work harder.
You should realize that a shorted cell still has voltage during charging. I've never seen one that has gone so dead short it's like replacing the cell with a lead bar in the battery. The plates still have some activity, just that the separator causing plates to contact each other, or sludge in the bottom, causes the bad cell to have a severely high self-discharge rate. And that cell gets really hot during charging compared to the other cells because of the high resistance connection in it. But it still will not pull the other good strings down after charging stops because the other cells that are in series with the bad cell have an extremely high level of surface charge - and they stay that way until load is applied to the string. When we had that battery go bad the other battery in the series string had an at-rest voltage well over 13 volts because it had been severely over-charged. But it never pulled the good strings down. Just made them work harder when load was applied to the whole thing.
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Chris -
Re: Battery max charge rateIn general, it does not. It actually can make for a less reliable (over all) system). You have 4x as much of anything, the over all chances of failure are 4x as much.
Same thing in airplanes. A twin-engine aircraft has 2x more chance of having an engine failure than a single engine. But you have 10x better chance of surviving it without a crash.
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Chris -
Re: Battery max charge rateChrisOlson wrote: »You need to have voltage differential between strings to get current to flow from one to the other.
That is not true. Take three batteries and connect them in series. That's the bank A. Then take two batteries, and connect them in series. That's the bank B. It models an extreme case of a three-battery string with one battery totally shorted. Now connect bank A to bank B in parallel. Obviously, the voltage will be the same for both banks. Yet, you will see some current discharging bank A into bank B.
Obviously, if you have 48V 24-cell strings and the short is high impedance the effect will be less pronounced and hard to detect because the difference is not so much pronounced, but you will be overcharging the "bad" string and overdischarging the "good" string, and there will be times when "good" strings discharge into "bad" string. But to detect this you would need to monitor current in both strings 24/7. If you don't, all you will see is the loss of capacity (as if the "bad" string was not there). That's exactly what you observed. Now, you will notice this loss of capacity very quickly. For other people there may be months and months. -
Re: Battery max charge rate
When you have a shorted cell in one string two things happen:
1). Upon charging, the other cells in that string will go above their normal Voltage (causing stress on them) so that the total Voltage in that string is the same as others.
2). Upon rest or discharging the string will have lower Voltage than the others so the higher Voltage string(s) will discharge into the lower Voltage string. This is a fact of physics, not a myth; Voltage difference creates current flow.
However this is not to say the other strings will discharge completely; left on their own there will be a 'leveling' of the Voltage between strings as per #1. The lower string will be brought up some (with the good cells pushed over normal) and the higher strings will be brought down some. At that point self-discharge of all batteries takes over and the only direction from there is down.
As Chris says, a shorted cell rarely has a Voltage potential of zero (although it can be very low) and depending on the number of cells in the string they may still operate within normal tolerances despite one cell being low. The effect is, of course, worst on 12 Volt systems rather than 48 (as Bill pointed out).
If you take 2 Volts out of six cells of a 12 Volt system and divide it up among the remaining cells you get 0.4 Volts 'extra' per cell; not a large difference, and that is with one cell at nominal zero. By the time you scale up to a 48 Volt system with 24 cells the difference is a miniscule 0.08 Volts 'extra' per cell. You may not be able to read it on your meter.
The bigger problem would be losing 1/6 of the Amp hour potential. Using 220 Amp hour batteries on 12 Volts and you drop 18 Amp hours 'usable' or 216 Watt hours +/- (and because the actual battery capacity is less the discharge will be heavier per Watt so the effect is compounded for a known load).
Another reason to avoid 12 Volt systems if at all possible. -
Re: Battery max charge rateChrisOlson wrote: »Same thing in airplanes. A twin-engine aircraft has 2x more chance of having an engine failure than a single engine. But you have 10x better chance of surviving it without a crash.
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Chris
This is why engineers are boring people at parties and tend to avoid bars:
Why Twins CrashMostly it's the usual suspects: fuel, weather and runway prangs. But poor maintenance is a surprisingly big player, as Aviation Consumer reported.
Between 1972 and 1976, the NTSB investigated the outcome of twin-engine crashes and concluded that in the event of an engine failure that resulted in a crash, the likelihood of it being fatal was four times greater than a crash in a single. (Despite the paucity of current data, it's still a lead-pipe cinch that a single with a failed engine is coming down somewhere. It may or may not result in a crash.)
Our most recent review of twin accident data tends to support this finding in general, if not to the same decimal point. Typically, in crashes where an engine failed in a twin, the accident was fatal between 20 and 50 percent of the time; in singles, the fatal rate for powerplant failure is lower, on the order of 10 percent, somewhat variable with model.
Why this is so is not too difficult to understand. Bluntly, pilots sometimes screw up engine-out emergency procedures by reacting too late to the developing situation or simply losing control. In some cases, they expose themselves to certain disaster by expecting too much of the airplane's single-engine performance or pushing the weight and balance envelope to the breaking point.
In one accident, a Baron was loaded 800 pounds over gross weight and couldn't maintain altitude when one engine failed. No surprise there. It crashed, killing all six aboard. It didn't help that the pilot had a fresh multi-engine rating and little experience in the airplane.
The answer is "it depends"... But conventional wisdom is not always correct for the "simple answers".
We have had several folks here with shorted cells that did damage series connected cells (they over charged) and killed bank (discharge the rest of the bank).
Granted, there should be lots of warnings--But those warnings (poor performance, one or more hot batteries, measured voltages/current flows, etc.) have to be observed in order to be useful.
One of the common symptoms of battery fires in large banks (central offices, backup power systems) is when the batteries start drawing >~2% of their rated current when they are full. It is not always a lead bar across the plates--It is something else that slowly affects overall battery/cell function.
Read the rest of the article... It is not that twins are more (or less) reliable/fault tolerant that is "killing people"--It is they are more complex. More can go wrong and pilots have additional chances for error. Simple problems/failures eventually lead to the site of the crash.
And back to why I try to keep off grid power systems as "simple as practicable". If not well maintained and inspected--The most complex/redundant system will still fail when needed--And is actually more likely to fail than the guy who has a trolling motor battery and a 300 watt MSW inverter in the garage on a trickle charger.
-BillNear San Francisco California: 3.5kWatt Grid Tied Solar power system+small backup genset -
Re: Battery max charge rateCariboocoot wrote: »2). Upon rest or discharging the string will have lower Voltage than the others so the higher Voltage string(s) will discharge into the lower Voltage string. This is a fact of physics, not a myth; Voltage difference creates current flow.
'coot - no, it does not discharge the other strings into that bad because of voltage difference. The only time you can get that to happen is if you charge them separately, then connect them to the bus. If they are connected to the same bus and charger, there will be no voltage difference even with a bad cell in one string. I have been there and done this, checked with an ammeter when I was trying to find the problem.
The cells that are in series with the bad one get so severely overcharged that their SG goes over 1.300 and they retain their high level of voltage after charging for a very long time, only drawn down by their own self-discharge rate. So no current flows from the good string to the bad.
There is only two ways to find a bad cell in parallel strings and that is with either SG readings (the bad cell will be low and the good ones extremely high) or checking voltage on every battery in the string. The only real way to monitor it on a daily basis is to have a battery monitor on each string that measures amp-hours in vs amp-hours out. And that is something I intend to implement on our bank (will require six battery monitors with a shunt on each string) as the batteries age. I haven't had any problems to-date as the batteries are fairly new yet. But with age I expect to start having differences. Being able to detect those and rotate batteries as necessary to correct it will make the difference between long life and wrecking a string because of a weak cell that doesn't get corrected or caught right away.
I hope people that do this see my common theme here on our highly parallel battery bank - it is a LOT of maintenance. And it is going to require accurate monitoring as the batteries age. We did it for a reason - and it was not cheap to set it up the way we did. But that doesn't mean it's as simple as a single series string. For most people doing the simplest way possible is going to be the best. But for people that have even two parallel strings, they should be aware that without constant monitoring and regular service that you can wreck a whole string as fast as snapping your fingers if you don't catch a problem right away. The good string will mask the problem in the bad one and make it harder to detect.
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Chris
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