โApr-17-2013 07:02 AM
โApr-17-2013 08:32 PM
MEXICOWANDERER wrote:I'm not much into acceptable. ๐ Should I throw in another charger even though I'm doing this on shore power or is 55 amps ok for that?
If you do your recharging in your driveway or RV park overnight, a slower rate is easier on the batteries. The question is "Where Is The Break Even Point?" I suspect in your case you may have an acceptable setup. Going camping for an extended period would jumble this all around however.
When I top charge a single 29, I start at around 12.65 and it takes 4 - 5 hours at 2-amperes to reach 15.0 volts. For the first half hour the amperage is in the 6 - 8 amp range.
BFL13 wrote:It was 38 amps when I checked (@ 14V). Was about 4 hrs or so when I checked. I really don't know if it climbed into boost or not. I should've checked more often but I didn't have time to do that.
I didn't see in the OP whether the Iota stayed at 55 amps for a long time before going into Absorption.
The Iota blurb says it will go straight to Absorption (what they call their 14.2v level) but do 55amps at first at that 14.2. My 7355 will too but at 13.8v instead of 14.2 whoopee-do! ๐
So just because it did 55a does not mean it was in bulk. You want to know if battery voltage ever got up past 14.2v. It looks like the OP did not get back to see what was happening and it could have done either, where it was at 14 by the time he got back to it?
smkettner wrote:14.7V won't finish charge these. At least not in a reasonable amount of time. 15V @ 8 amps on the HF manual gets it done in about 2 hrs, sometimes 3 AFTER the converter (old Paramode) or my portable reaches their respective "full". The BD's EQ setting takes longer than the HF manual but it uses a lower amp rate (4A). I do typically leave the batts on the converter for a week before I do any finishing charges just to see if they get them up to baseline SG but the converter (Paramode) only seemed to accomplish that if I kept SOC above 85%. I don't know if the Iota would do it at 85% SOC or not.
I suggested to wait more than a week to check specific gravity to allow IOTA at least one destratification cycle before you worry about the finish charge. I think you will find that the batteries are fine with just the IOTA. Or the data point would be interesting if finish charge still seems needed.
โApr-17-2013 07:34 PM
โApr-17-2013 07:04 PM
โApr-17-2013 06:54 PM
mena661 wrote:full_mosey wrote:You're a heavy user too! After that last trip, I just might get two 230W panels instead of one (thanks KJINTF!).
364/3 = 121/day. That is about my daily draw from a 189AH bank. With 300W solar, I get about 90AH/day back at a net loss of 30AH/day. 3days x 30AH = 50%SOC. I do steal some AH from my 68AH starting battery with the 7-pin cable.I don't sell solar, but I am sold on it. ๐LOL! Can I use that in my sig when I get some solar? ๐
โApr-17-2013 04:08 PM
โApr-17-2013 03:10 PM
smkettner wrote:Thank you for the explanation smk. Good to know my observations were incorrect. I am plugging in at home and definitely not in a hurry to charge there. And from what I understand, slow charging is better. BTW, finishing charge in this case would be the proper term but I'm using the EQ feature of the BD to do it as it requires some 15+V to perform that. I normally use the manual charger but didn't have time to babysit it and I didn't want the batts to sit a week at low SG. It actually took that 8 hrs for the SG to "catch up". When I stopped the 2nd EQ, SG was at 1.265-1.275. BFL describes this as "SG lag". I wonder if it has to do with the amount of amps used on the finishing charge as I don't remember any lag with the manual charger (it uses 8 amps vs 4 on the BD).
When you first connected the IOTA I assume the battery was near full charge. IOTA will hold the max voltage for about 15 minutes before it cancels boost mode and settles into absorbtion at 14.2 according to the specs.
When the battery is low, especially a large battery, the IOTA will remain in boost mode for an extended period until the max voltage is reached. This can easily take 3 to 5+ hours depending on discharge and capacity. With 364 Ah to replace and 55 amps you just will not get there in 30 minutes. All converters and chargers work this way. For faster charging you will need more amps. But since you are not really running the generator to charge, the added amps to reduce time is unnecessary. The slower charge is actually better as long as you have the time.
Assuming you plug in at home I would wait a couple weeks before you check specific gravity and decide to recondition with the portable.
Good to see those L16 finally earning their keep.It was actually a little exciting to see them get some use.
full_mosey wrote:You're a heavy user too! After that last trip, I just might get two 230W panels instead of one (thanks KJINTF!).
364/3 = 121/day. That is about my daily draw from a 189AH bank. With 300W solar, I get about 90AH/day back at a net loss of 30AH/day. 3days x 30AH = 50%SOC. I do steal some AH from my 68AH starting battery with the 7-pin cable.
I don't sell solar, but I am sold on it. ๐LOL! Can I use that in my sig when I get some solar? ๐
โApr-17-2013 09:28 AM
mena661 wrote:
DW and I pigged out on amp hours on our last trip to the beach a week ago. According to the Victron, we used 364 Ah in 3 days. ...
โApr-17-2013 09:24 AM
mena661 wrote:When you first connected the IOTA I assume the battery was near full charge. IOTA will hold the max voltage for about 15 minutes before it cancels boost mode and settles into absorbtion at 14.2 according to the specs.
Thanks all. I was under the impression that the Iota went right to 14.8V. Didn't know it was like other converters that ramp to that voltage. That would explain the behavior. Although I do wonder why it went to 14.8 when I first connected it. About solar, it's on my list.
โApr-17-2013 09:13 AM
smkettner wrote:
I am not sure what the complaint is on the IOTA?
It will take some time at 55 amps to see 14.5+ volts.
โApr-17-2013 08:59 AM
โApr-17-2013 08:47 AM
โApr-17-2013 08:04 AM
โApr-17-2013 07:55 AM
โApr-17-2013 07:19 AM