Sweeney
Administrator
Yup - I did it. After I killed my high end deep cycle battery, I jumped into the pool of lithium batteries. Mostly becuase of cost savings -- it was less expensive and a BMS would keep me from being dumb for the 4'th time. This combined was enough to push me over the top and entice me to jump into lithium batteries for the first time. The cost is lower (finally) and the apparent problems of cold charging are resolved, and finally there is just the overall "on paper" improvements that I still need to be convinced of.
The battery I purchased was a Li Time Battery - I would have rathered follow the nest in their brand selection, but I needed one faster than I could get one so I went with Li Time. I upgraded my onboard charger a couple years ago, going from the standard at the time 5amp charger to a 10. I also have the Victron Smart Shunt
Observation and Questions:
I just charged to 100%, and am now 'running down' the battery by running lights without the onboard charger, simulating a trip I am hoping to make next week.
What I mean by that is si, if I am charging with solar (or shore power) and the battery decides at 8am its done charging, and my refrigerator pulls it down to 40%. There a chance or likelyhood that I'll now run out over power overnight. I wonder if the behavior on 'solar' is different -- if the solar charge controller kicks up 8-10 amps at "sunrise" will the battery respond differently than being on shore power. Will I just need to power cycle the charger at waking?
---
This is why I love this forum - I'm sure somone is going to answer this without the typical internet snark!!! Oh crap, I just set up for snarky answers.
The battery I purchased was a Li Time Battery - I would have rathered follow the nest in their brand selection, but I needed one faster than I could get one so I went with Li Time. I upgraded my onboard charger a couple years ago, going from the standard at the time 5amp charger to a 10. I also have the Victron Smart Shunt
Observation and Questions:
ONE:
The victron controller (The Smart Shunt) using the same settings as for lead acid is wildly off from the battery BMS. Like huge differences. I have adjusted parameters suggested by technical documentation - we'll see if this improves it. How does yours compare with the battery BMS if you have one?TWO:
The 10 amp onboard charger falls of in amperage as the battery gets fuller. The BMS on the battery drops into 'standby' when it amperage gets down to the 2 amps range. The BMS has 3 modes: Charging, Discharging and Standby. Once it goes into standby, the only way I can 'push' the charge higher to attach a 50 amp converter (from the RV service truck) to put it back into charging mode to get it up to 100% --- The onboard 'stalls out' at around 80% SOC. I need to verify this number. This is fine for testing, but surely something that is not a great solution. For batteyr longjevity thi smight be a plus, and it still gives me a geater Ah capacity than lead acid.I just charged to 100%, and am now 'running down' the battery by running lights without the onboard charger, simulating a trip I am hoping to make next week.
THREE:
Once I reach 'discharging' status -- I am not sure when the battery will again request charge - I assume it will oscilate between low and high range. I am curious how this will work in the world.What I mean by that is si, if I am charging with solar (or shore power) and the battery decides at 8am its done charging, and my refrigerator pulls it down to 40%. There a chance or likelyhood that I'll now run out over power overnight. I wonder if the behavior on 'solar' is different -- if the solar charge controller kicks up 8-10 amps at "sunrise" will the battery respond differently than being on shore power. Will I just need to power cycle the charger at waking?
---
This is why I love this forum - I'm sure somone is going to answer this without the typical internet snark!!! Oh crap, I just set up for snarky answers.