BFL13 wrote:
EDIT--BTW, I missed something about Li. I have seen they need 14.6 or whatever so eg, PD makes a special converter that does that instead of their usual 14.4. So why is your setting at 13.6?
OTOH, ISTR the 48v charger was for 54v and 54/4 = 13.5
Having a programmable charger is best.
Remember that my primary charging is all done by solar.
Settings: Bulk 14.1v, absorb 14.2v (10 minute event can't be turned off) I have only seen 14.2v twice this year in Feb., float 13.6v.
Note: I'm calling float under my circumstances as zero charging with solar carrying the loads during the day. Some folks with lfp charge to "their" 100% then turn off charging run batteries down and do over again when needed. Why waste good solar power?
The reason the charger is set as Float 13.6v is when plugged in for a shorter period of time, say at an rv park for a couple days or week. Even then we're living off the solar/ batteries a benefit that was built in when building the system of not having to be reliant/ needing the power cord and if we want to use the power hook up I'll set AC input to 50a or 30a on the me-arc settings depending on source go into the sub panel flip the breaker on for the water heater.
LFP doesn't need 14.6v. You have to decide what level of battery voltage you want to charge too knowing that it will yeild a particular level of capacity.
Meaning if 14.6v (3.65 vpc x4, 100ah) 100% manufactured specs.
I'm using 14.1v (3.52 vpc) which read 99% SOC as "my" full battery but on the battery it around 87-90% charged keeping it away from the upper danger area. I personally have never been below 28% SOC (72% DOD) which is still 12.8v (3.20 vpc) without large load. My inverter will shut down at 12.0v (first line of protection). I remember seeing 12.4v once inverting using the microwave for 4 minutes at that low of SOC. The bms will shut the system down if any cell drops to 2.90v (last line of protection).
With all that said you still have to reset SOC %, mine still happens using the lower voltage explained below by Elite Power Solutions, GBS Batteries.
The EMS system has a minimum recorded resolution of +/- 0.5A so any current below that level is not accounted for. The system could be setup for a finer resolution, but the shunt value would have to be reduced which reduces the systems maximum current capability.
The system will reset the capacity to 100% whenever the pack voltage reaches 3.49 to 3.52 V/cell on average, depending on how it was programmed, and the pack current must be negative (charging) and typically under 35A and then it will set the capacity to 100%. Again, these are all firmware variables so it's possible your system was programmed differently. You should continue charging after this point until the battery truly is full to have the reference point of 100% be correct.
If you have many small loads that are not accounted for then you would occasionally need to re-sync the pack with 100%. The frequency at which you have to do this will vary depending on your application and usage.
My batteries are prismatic cells, 20 cells .
The drop in batteries it seems their bms or ems needs 14.4v -14.6v to reset the capacity % plus balance cells if needed. It won't hurt to charge to less but the SOC % will get out of wack.
I'm sure I left out some info or maybe could of explained better but hopefully get the jist.
12v 500ah, 20 cells_ 4s5p (GBS LFMP battery system). 8 CTI 160 watt panels (1,280 watts)2s4p,Panels mounted flat. Magnum PT100 SCC, Magnum 3012 hybrid inverter, ME-ARC 50. Installed 4/2016 been on 24/7/365, daily 35-45% DOD 2,500+ partial cycles.