โSep-21-2020 01:45 PM
โSep-22-2020 08:52 AM
Itinerant1 wrote:phemens wrote:
The guy that built my batteries is noodling around with these Link
They're heating pads for pipe elbows, they draw 7.5 watts each, he says I'd need 2x battery, which means 12 total or 90 watts total (6 batteries). He's hooking them up to a 1207 temperature controller. That's what I'm going to try and the controller for the blown air, maybe the pads are a better long term solution. I guess another option would be to stick the larger tank heating pad to a sheet of aluminum to span the footprint of all the batteries.
We'll see!
I entertained this Facon warming padunder the batteries. I would of stuck it to an aluminum sheet cut to fit the wooden structure containing the batteries to spread the heat as best as possible. Wired into the 12v fuse panel but having a toggle switch to give power when needed. The only issue I was worried about is it being sandwiched between the 1/2" rubber pad and the aluminum sheet, then having the batteries sitting on top. I don't know if it would matter?
At 5.6a while running is so little of a draw, which is equal to the humidifier that is always running in the trailer.
I wouldn't stick any of the heating pads directly on batteries incase it quit working so not to have a sticky mess on them.
โSep-22-2020 07:49 AM
phemens wrote:
The guy that built my batteries is noodling around with these Link
They're heating pads for pipe elbows, they draw 7.5 watts each, he says I'd need 2x battery, which means 12 total or 90 watts total (6 batteries). He's hooking them up to a 1207 temperature controller. That's what I'm going to try and the controller for the blown air, maybe the pads are a better long term solution. I guess another option would be to stick the larger tank heating pad to a sheet of aluminum to span the footprint of all the batteries.
We'll see!
โSep-22-2020 07:46 AM
folivier wrote:
Look on ebay for snowmobile hand grip warmers. I have a friend who added these to his Battle Born batteries. They are powered by the batteries themselves, he added an on/off switch, and a thermostat so they only turn on at the low temperatures he wants.
โSep-22-2020 07:25 AM
โSep-21-2020 06:50 PM
phemens wrote:BFL13 wrote:
No idea, but since it is just to keep them from freezing, and not to get to room temperatures, maybe grab some ground heat? It is your land, so might be possible for a small-scale set-up? No idea!
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geothermal_heat_pump
It's an interesting idea and one we're considering for the eventual home we're going to build. We need to dig pretty deep here to get below the frost line, so the shallow dig type setups you see (with a length of pvc pipe down a couple of feet) probably wouldn't work very well here unfortunately.
โSep-21-2020 06:26 PM
BFL13 wrote:
No idea, but since it is just to keep them from freezing, and not to get to room temperatures, maybe grab some ground heat? It is your land, so might be possible for a small-scale set-up? No idea!
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geothermal_heat_pump
โSep-21-2020 06:23 PM
Second Chance wrote:
Battle Born sells thermostatically controlled 12VDC heating blankets for their LiFePO4 batteries. I installed them on my batteries for the upcoming winter. I think the specs say they come on at 35F and turn off at 45F. Installation was easy - "peel and stick" and then wire up the thermostat modules.
Rob
โSep-21-2020 06:12 PM
โSep-21-2020 05:32 PM
โSep-21-2020 03:41 PM
โSep-21-2020 03:37 PM
Itinerant1 wrote:
Depending on your heat duct maybe you can tap into it. Mine ended right above the batteries in the front compartment. I'll block the vent in the bedroom where this section is located so the air is forced down the pipe. There are 2 other vents in the bedroom/ bathroom so no lose in heat.
If we're running the furnace to heat the 5th wheel why not use some of it for the batteries.
Just to give you an idea. ๐
โSep-21-2020 03:35 PM
2oldman wrote:
Aren't there battery blankets for cold temps? 80-90 amps of solar? Kudos.
โSep-21-2020 03:28 PM
โSep-21-2020 03:23 PM