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โMar-26-2021 09:06 PM
BFL13 wrote:The shunt is just a fixed resistor. Monitor measures the voltage drop across the shunt to get the amps. Monitor also knows the voltage. The microprocessor multiplies amps x volts to get watts. Then microprocessor accumulates this wattage over time to give watt/hours. Then watt/hours are compared to the capacity and the percent charge is displayed if requested. Capacity might be based some on what you entered and possible some on what has been measured over several cycles to see if you were honest.
How does the monitor know that 5 amps is now 63.5w instead of 68w when you change to watts instead of amps? How can the shunt know that?
โMar-26-2021 08:51 PM
BFL13 wrote:
Thanks. almost got it that time! ๐ so when the monitor is doing amps as the read-out, it says 5 amps no matter what the battery voltage is, 12.5 or 12.1 it still says 5 amps if that is the draw.
So is 5 amps at 12.5 the same draw as 5 amps at 12.1 ? the discharge graphs for decline in SOC are quite linear. (not so with charging graphs--not linear)
I know a light bulb gets lower in amps draw as voltage goes down and the lamp dims. to maintain a 5 amp load with lights you have to keep raising the voltage. (if that has anything to do with whether 5 amps is 5 amps or that is just because lamps do that)
โMar-26-2021 06:36 PM
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โMar-26-2021 05:47 PM
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โMar-26-2021 05:36 PM
time2roll wrote:
When it gets low, charge. When it gets enough charge relax.
Trust the monitor and have less worries. I don't need to know how every component functions... just so it does.
Like fuel on the road, YMMV.
โMar-26-2021 05:27 PM