โJan-31-2014 09:25 AM
โFeb-01-2014 07:54 AM
BFL13 wrote:
AFAIK the Iota IQ4 goes to 14.8 but that's so the batteries can get to 14.6. Once the batteries reach 14.6, it stays there for 15 minutes and then drops to 14.2. Phooey on that!
I don't know any converter that will do it right in every way. That's why I still use the 13.8v Parallax 7355 as the converter for when on shore power (works great) and use separate chargers for the real battery charging stuff to proper high voltages for my 6s and Trojan 1275s.
For fast charging four 6s I use a 100amp charger that goes to 14.8 and stays there, or I can crank that voltage higher if it is cold out so it should be more like 15.1v Note that 100/440 is only a 22% charging rate and you could safely go higher to a 30% charging rate on the four 6s if you want.
Yes it is a way to get by in the fall/spring when solar is not as good as in summer, to just charge for an hour in the morning with charger and then go solar for the rest of it. Trick is to have :
- a serious charger and gen to run it
- gen hours that let you run it in the morning.
That may let you off the hook for getting more solar, so you end up with too much solar in the summer. I keep going back and forth on this, where I get too much solar for summer and sell some, then buy more for the spring and then wish I hadn't and sell that, then a sale on panels happens I can't resist so I buy more and end up with too much solar again! There is nobody who can help you if you get that affliction. ๐
โJan-31-2014 06:29 PM
BFL13 wrote:Yep, that's what it does (I think).
AFAIK the Iota IQ4 goes to 14.8 but that's so the batteries can get to 14.6.
โJan-31-2014 04:09 PM
โJan-31-2014 03:43 PM
chloe's ranch wrote:
Thanks NinerBikes. Last November my informal power analysis showed that the battery dropping lower each morning with 240 watts of solar and I ended up running the generator more than we like. In the summer the 240 watts worked fine for our needs(led TV and led lights.) So adding more solar is more for our use Nov.-Feb.and probably more than we need in the summer. I do like your comment about the advantage of redundancy.
โJan-31-2014 02:30 PM
โJan-31-2014 02:29 PM
smkettner wrote:
I would not want 14.5 volts on my battery for two hours every day when not in use.
This is where the Morningstar (and others) can be programmed to charge differently depending on the start voltage each day. While in use you may want four+ hours at 14.2/14.8 and not in use just 15 minutes.
โJan-31-2014 02:27 PM
โJan-31-2014 02:20 PM
โJan-31-2014 02:18 PM
BFL13 wrote:
Many/most controllers do not have an adjustable high set point and they top out at 14.3 or whatever. I don't know what the Phocos does.
Trojan 105s want 14.8 so it might be a consideration to make the second controller an adjustable one. They cost more of course.
โJan-31-2014 02:11 PM
chloe's ranch wrote:
I checked online and the Phocos factory boost set point is 14.5 for two hours. I did not see that you could change that setting.
โJan-31-2014 01:53 PM
โJan-31-2014 01:41 PM
โJan-31-2014 01:38 PM
smkettner wrote:
$500 seems high for a 30a MPPT. Highly rated Rogue 30a is $375, Morningstar 60a is ~$550. I can assure you the Morningstar is topline.
โJan-31-2014 01:32 PM
โJan-31-2014 01:28 PM