denmendez65
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The battery disconector/isolator is to the right. Thats where it goes to the inverterNot your victron pic. Hannos pic.
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The battery disconector/isolator is to the right. Thats where it goes to the inverterNot your victron pic. Hannos pic.
The one on the right is getting discharged the least. It has more leds.The battery disconector/isolator is to the right. Thats where it goes to the inverter
No, it is getting discharged the most and charged the most. Read the Victron screen shot. That one has the shortest leads and will supply and get charged with the most current because the resistance is the least on that battery.The one on the right is getting discharged the least. It has more leds.
The right battery will get charged quicker than the left one.No, it is getting discharged the most and charged the most. Read the Victron screen shot. That one has the shortest leads and will supply and get charged with the most current because the resistance is the least on that battery.
Yea for all purposes that is the busbarThe battery disconector/isolator is to the right. Thats where it goes to the inverter
That's the theory. Why is the one on the left getting to full led 100% along with the right one and then getting to 2 leds while discharging before the one on the right?No, it is getting discharged the most and charged the most. Read the Victron screen shot. That one has the shortest leads and will supply and get charged with the most current because the resistance is the least on that battery.
Exactly.Yea for all purposes that is the busbar
So distance to and from switch is all that matters
I cant say for certain of course, but my theory is that it never gets full. It has already been discussed that the LEDs arent that accurate. So the battery on the right gets fully charged first and the one on the left is not getting all the way there.That's the theory. Why is the one on the left getting to full led 100% along with the right one and then getting to 2 leds while discharging before the one on the right?
If it gets to 57.6V then its full.I cant say for certain of course, but my theory is that it never gets full. It has already been discussed that the LEDs arent that accurate. So the battery on the right gets fully charged first and the one on the left is not getting all the way there.
The drift is gradual, over time the one on the left will not hold its charge because it is never getting full. The moment you start discharging and the artificial charge on the second one is gone, it will indicate a lower SOC than the right one.
And how is that measured? When connected to the other battery? When you have just pulled it off the battery bank? Most of that is superficial charge.If it gets to 57.6V then its full.
They're in parallel. They'll both be 57.6V. The battery cannot absorb any more at this voltage. Its even fully charged at 55.2V but that voltage will need absorption time which it gets 2 hours already which is plenty.And how is that measured? When connected to the other battery? When you have just pulled it off the battery bank? Most of that is superficial charge.
Just because you read 57.6V across a battery bank does not mean all the batteries are full that are connected to it.They're in parallel. They'll both be 57.6V. The battery cannot absorb any more at this voltage. Its even fully charged from 55.2V.
They need to be disconnected and left standing.Just because you read 57.6V across a battery bank does not mean all the batteries are full that are connected to it.
Yes they are, there is no voltage drop when there is no load. See my edit.Just because you read 57.6V across a battery bank does not mean all the batteries are full that are connected to it.
They will drop to 53.6V resting voltage after a few hours. LEDs wont change because they are coulomb counters.They need to be disconnected and left standing.
You can't do that. You will read the average voltage across all the batteries. The only real test is to disconnect each and leave them standing for a few hours and measure.Yes they are, there is no voltage drop when there is no load. See my edit.
a dyness LFP battery is 100% charged between 55.2V to 57.6V. So if one battery is at 57.6V then the other is not far behind. There will never ever be a 2V difference between the 2 at that voltage.You can't do that. You will read the average voltage across all the batteries. The only real test is to disconnect each and leave them standing for a few hours and measure.
Just needs to be 1V, and you will have a 20% difference in SOC between 20 and 90% SOC.a dyness LFP battery is 100% charged between 55.2V to 57.6V. So if one battery is at 57.6V then the other is not far behind. There will never ever be a 2V difference between the 2 at that voltage.
Not above 55.2V.Just needs to be 1V, and you will have a 20% difference in SOC between 20 and 90% SOC.
the battery has to get full at some point , can use eskom to charge it full , it just takes one charge cycle to get them balanced initially and then you can monitor from a full state what it doesI cant say for certain of course, but my theory is that it never gets full. It has already been discussed that the LEDs arent that accurate. So the battery on the right gets fully charged first and the one on the left is not getting all the way there.
The drift is gradual, over time the one on the left will not hold its charge because it is never getting full. The moment you start discharging and the artificial charge on the second one is gone, it will indicate a lower SOC than the right one.