โNov-27-2022 12:45 PM
โNov-30-2022 10:44 PM
StirCrazy wrote:S Davis wrote:
โI could just take the two 4s BMS off and use a 100amp 8s BMS that turns all 8 cells into one battery instead of two in parrelell.โ
Except you just made a 24 volt battery with a 8-S BMS. Eight cells in series makes 25.6 volts. To stay at 12 volts and up the ah you would have to use a 4-S BMS and use parallel sets of cells. The draw back is not being able to monitor each cell in the battery.
true, you would be monitering groups of cells, but if you get quality cells that are matched, thats not an issue.
I still recomend building seperat batteries unless you want to go to a higher capacity and use a stepdown. but in my case I would do another 310AH battery and have two of them. so when I am using my camper I would just use one as thats 10 days camping with the furnace running 24/7, but for my 5th wheel I could have two in there and just move one back and forth between the 5th and the camper. one will give me more usable capacity than I have with my four 6V batteries so it will be fine when I am using the camper, but when I am going for a longer dry camping backwoods with the 5th wheel I can put the second in and double my capacity. being only 48lbs its not a big deal either.
โNov-30-2022 01:52 PM
โNov-30-2022 01:37 PM
pianotuna wrote:I can agree with this disclosure. Primarily because the usage is unknown.
wa8yxm and time2roll. I have great respect for both of you, but this time I have to disagree.
From Battle Born:
"Can I Connect 100 Amp-Hour Battle Born Batteries to the 270 Amp-Hour Battle Born Batteries?
Here at Battle Born Batteries, we offer two different lithium battery sizes: our 100 Amp-Hour BB100 series and GC2 series, and the new 270 Amp-hour batteries.
These two different sizes of batteries should never be connected. Any attempt to connect Battle Born Batteries of different amp-hours will result in a voided warranty.
You should only ever connect batteries of the same size."
โNov-30-2022 01:15 PM
pianotuna wrote:
wa8yxm and time2roll. I have great respect for both of you, but this time I have to disagree.
From Battle Born:
These two different sizes of batteries should never be connected. Any attempt to connect Battle Born Batteries of different amp-hours will result in a voided warranty.
You should only ever connect batteries of the same size."
โNov-30-2022 11:26 AM
โNov-30-2022 10:18 AM
S Davis wrote:
โI could just take the two 4s BMS off and use a 100amp 8s BMS that turns all 8 cells into one battery instead of two in parrelell.โ
Except you just made a 24 volt battery with a 8-S BMS. Eight cells in series makes 25.6 volts. To stay at 12 volts and up the ah you would have to use a 4-S BMS and use parallel sets of cells. The draw back is not being able to monitor each cell in the battery.
โNov-29-2022 04:25 PM
โNov-29-2022 01:01 PM
โNov-29-2022 07:20 AM
wa8yxm wrote:StirCrazy wrote:
you should keep them the same so it ballances the amprage between each battery. if you use the situation above with one 100 amp battery and one 200 amp battery in parralell and you put a 100 amp load on it, yes the battery voltage will drop the same but the capacity of the 100amp battery will drop twice as fast if you have a 50amp BMS on each battery (for example) so once the 100amp battery gets down to the cut off voltage (10% in my battery) it will shut off trying to throw all the load to the other battery but since that load is twice the amount alowed by the second battery the BMS will shut it off on protection also.
Again I call BULL. You are assuming that each battery provides 1/2 the load current. This is beyond belief, it very simply WILL NOT HAPPEN in fact IT CAN NOT HAPPEN. for as you yourself admitted the voltage drops as the SOC goes down. Thus the if you put a 100 amp load on the pair the 100 amp battery will not provide 50 amps but 33.33333333 and the 200 amp will provided 66.6666666d The current divided PRECISELY according to the capacity of the batteries.
This is the ONLY way it can happen. for the battery with the higher state of Charge will provide ALL the current till the SOC's match (Or nearly all)
This is the very MYTH that I warned about in my earlier post.
Now instead of electricity think water
you have two tanks side by side
one tank holds 1,000 gallons and the other thank which is the same height and the same depth but TWICE as wide. holds 2,000 gallons.
They are connected at the bottom by a "T"
When you draw water off the "T" which one is going to hit empty first?
Now think about this... if the water is HIGHER in one tank, that tank pushes harder and will provide all the water till the levels are the same. then they split the load 1/3 2/3
It is exactly how the batteries work.
The only warning is the charger
If you set up a charger for 300 amp hours and one of the batteies goes HIGH RESISTANCE... I'm not sure what happens (Due to the BMS systems. they may protect or not)
โNov-29-2022 05:40 AM
โNov-29-2022 02:01 AM
time2roll wrote:
For reference I have 2x 600 ah batteries in parallel and it is very common to initially see 60 amps from one and 70 amps from the other running the microwave.
โNov-28-2022 01:28 PM
wa8yxm wrote:This is closer to true for lead-acid due to the high internal resistance. LFP will be initially closer to 50/50, but the truth is even if they are identical 200 amp batteries in parallel the current will not be equal due to variations in the cabling resistance etc. Even the slightest minutia of difference creates an imbalance.
Thus the if you put a 100 amp load on the pair the 100 amp battery will not provide 50 amps but 33.33333333 and the 200 amp will provided 66.6666666d The current divided PRECISELY according to the capacity of the batteries.
โNov-28-2022 12:38 PM
StirCrazy wrote:
you should keep them the same so it ballances the amprage between each battery. if you use the situation above with one 100 amp battery and one 200 amp battery in parralell and you put a 100 amp load on it, yes the battery voltage will drop the same but the capacity of the 100amp battery will drop twice as fast if you have a 50amp BMS on each battery (for example) so once the 100amp battery gets down to the cut off voltage (10% in my battery) it will shut off trying to throw all the load to the other battery but since that load is twice the amount alowed by the second battery the BMS will shut it off on protection also.
โNov-28-2022 12:01 PM
โNov-28-2022 11:38 AM
wa8yxm wrote:
Good chance your 200 amp battery is two 100 or 4 50s in the same box.