Feb-04-2021 07:05 PM
Feb-16-2021 04:33 PM
Feb-16-2021 03:30 PM
BFL13 wrote:
Relion lets you recharge at lower temperatures below freezing, and doesn't start requiring reduced amps until below freezing.
https://ceb8596f236225acd007-8e95328c173a04ed694af83ee4e24c15.ssl.cf5.rackcdn.com/docs/product/RELiO...
Feb-16-2021 10:24 AM
Feb-15-2021 06:38 PM
Feb-15-2021 01:01 PM
Feb-15-2021 12:46 PM
Feb-15-2021 11:26 AM
Feb-15-2021 08:33 AM
Feb-15-2021 07:30 AM
BFL13 wrote:
Looks like LFP owners should have a 10 amp ordinary car battery charger along as part of their kits. Often recommended anyway in case of converter failure so you can keep on camping.
Procedure for recharging LFPs that are below freezing:
1. heat them up to above freezing
2. charge at 10 amps till they are above 41F (charging will continue to heat them up) Leave heater on if gen can do both.
3. swap over to your high amp charger once they are above 41F
Beware of your solar amps, might have to switch off solar.
If the LFPs are outside on the tongue and never get above 41F, get more gas for your generator to keep charging at 10 amps for the month of Sundays that will take.
Have a way to measure your LFP battery cell temperature (as mentioned by itinerant1)
Feb-15-2021 05:37 AM
Feb-15-2021 05:02 AM
BFL13 wrote:
All LFPs are Lithium-ion, but not all Lithium-ions are LFP.
Wiki article says of "Lithium-ions" that:
" At temperatures from 0 to 5 °C charging is possible, but the charge current should be reduced"
using the same 41F marker that Trillium does.
The questions:
1. Does that apply to all Lithium-ions including LFPs?
2. Is a Trillium an LFP?
Besides all that, worth noting that Lithium-ion development is still on-going with possible associated cost reductions in making them, which should lower their future retail prices if successful.
Feb-14-2021 07:59 AM
Feb-14-2021 07:21 AM
Feb-13-2021 04:08 AM
StirCrazy wrote:BFL13 wrote:
"Trillium features a Trojan-specific cell...... It’s cobalt-free and nickel-free, and it features the industry’s 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 °C (41 to 113 °F).[134][better source needed] Charging should be performed within this temperature range.
At temperatures from 0 to 5 °C charging is possible, but the charge current should be reduced"
no lithium ion has many different forms and LiFePo4 is only one of them. Nickel cadium is a type of Li and so on, there are at least 6 different Li types out there in use. this is why it can get confusing.
oh and dont take wikipedia as gospal, anyone can edit it, plus you dont know what format of Li the author was talking about. this is the most confusing part about Li, everyone refurs to it in the generic but each type has its own properties. for instance LifePo4 is the least likly to catch on fire during use LOL.. it is considered the safest. mind you I havent read much about tirillium yet so that might be even better.
Steve
Steve