โFeb-04-2021 07:05 PM
โFeb-13-2021 03:36 AM
BFL13 wrote:
"Trillium features a Trojan-specific cell...... Itโs cobalt-free and nickel-free, and it features the industryโs safest chemistry"
They say it is "Lithium-ion". If that is not LFP ??, then perhaps it acts differently. Not a clue.
This explains the various types of Lithium-ion cells. It mentions the 41F figure in the part about charging, so it might apply to the LFP versions ?????
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lithium-ion_battery
"Li?ion batteries offer good charging performance at cooler temperatures and may even allow 'fast-charging' within a temperature range of 5 to 45 ยฐC (41 to 113 ยฐF).[134][better source needed] Charging should be performed within this temperature range.
At temperatures from 0 to 5 ยฐC charging is possible, but the charge current should be reduced"
โFeb-12-2021 06:58 PM
โFeb-12-2021 05:20 PM
BFL13 wrote:
Trillium guide linked earlier and your post about BMS.
I got my SiO2 in October, and local LFPs were and are still high priced for drop-ins.
Things are getting better for LFP pricing according to reports on this forum. Local pricing depends on what the dealers' costs were when they got them for how much they can lower them if forced to by the market.
eg, http://www.wegosolar.com/categories.php?........ory=Deep-Cycle-Batteries/CAN-BAT-Lithium
I saw that one PT recently posted at a very low price for LFP.
โFeb-12-2021 05:02 PM
BFL13 wrote:
Be worth knowing for those interested if the heating blankets need PSW 120v like electric blankets do.
Reminds me, itinerant1 explained how he uses a heater to warm up his batts before charging them in cold temps. So that means he has to not get the batts so low that they can't run the heater for long enough to warm the batts. You would need to work out the AH the heater would need next morning and be careful to not let the furnace run the batts down past that SOC overnight.
Nothing very complicated, but you would be stuck if you forgot.
โFeb-12-2021 02:38 PM
BFL13 wrote:
Be worth knowing for those interested if the heating blankets need PSW 120v like electric blankets do.
Reminds me, itinerant1 explained how he uses a heater to warm up his batts before charging them in cold temps. So that means he has to not get the batts so low that they can't run the heater for long enough to warm the batts. You would need to work out the AH the heater would need next morning and be careful to not let the furnace run the batts down past that SOC overnight.
Nothing very complicated, but you would be stuck if you forgot.
โFeb-12-2021 02:17 PM
โFeb-12-2021 01:41 PM
โFeb-12-2021 01:24 PM
BFL13 wrote:PWM in the BMS based on temperature would work.
The BMS keeps the amps under its size of 200 amps, but how does it keep the 100a charger at 30 amps when the temp is below 41F?
Seems like you need a 30 amp charger
โFeb-12-2021 01:20 PM
โFeb-12-2021 12:47 PM
BFL13 wrote:
The BMS amps size is chosen for your intended discharge to run the MW say 200 amps size to cover the 150 amps and a bit so you can leave the TV on while running the MW.
Now the charging spec says (on 200AH) you can charge at 200a if above 73F, 112a if above 41F, and 30 amps if under 41F.
You have a 100a charger and a gen to run that, so you can use that above 41F, but it is 35F and you need a recharge. Now what?
The BMS keeps the amps under its size of 200 amps, but how does it keep the 100a charger at 30 amps when the temp is below 41F?
Seems like you need a 30 amp charger
โFeb-12-2021 12:30 PM
BFL13 wrote:
That's way better on one 100AH batt than with regular AGMs, and why I got the battery. LFPs can do that too or even more so, but I had no need to spend twice as much for an LFP, and I was nervous about the low temp issue for our scenarios.
โFeb-12-2021 08:52 AM
pianotuna wrote:
Hi Steve,
The SiO2 specification is zero volts and over six hundred cycles to 80% of OEM capacity. Whether that is "puffery" or a real honest to goodness number, I do not know.
I don't know which site I found it on, unfortunately.
โFeb-12-2021 08:12 AM
โFeb-12-2021 08:11 AM
โFeb-12-2021 08:01 AM