โSep-09-2022 12:39 PM
โSep-12-2022 07:04 AM
EnzoColorado wrote:valhalla360 wrote:
How low are the existing batteries come morning?
A 600w coffee maker should pull around 50amps for maybe 10min for a total consumption of around 8.5amp-hr. That seems quite reasonable off a 200amp-hr battery bank unless they are borderline covering the overnight consumption.
As previously mentioned, mixing different battery types (doubly so with different ages) is not recommended.
Usually low to mid 60% in the morning before the panels start to receive lights. I'm told that AGM batteries shouldn't be discharged more than 50% so I'm using 100amp-hr useable capacity in my back of napkin calculation.
โSep-10-2022 01:05 PM
โSep-10-2022 10:35 AM
โSep-10-2022 08:09 AM
โSep-10-2022 07:09 AM
EnzoColorado wrote:Good plan and you can discharge to 20% SOC. But you have to replace those AHs which might be problem on overcast days... Maybe more panels.
Sounds like I should just get an pure sine wave 2K inverter and give my current batteries a try before getting fancy with adding lithium batteries. If this works, then in a few years when I replace the AGM with lithium, I'll simply have even more power to spare.
โSep-09-2022 07:54 PM
3 tons wrote:
Well, lets assume your two batteries total about 200a/hrs, with a lower available limit of say a 50% depth of dischargeโฆAnd since with 200w of solar, your batteries are typically topped off by 10:00am, letโs then assume that at about 75โish % average PV efficiency you recovered maybe 15a/hrs from sunrise to 1000, which would hypothetically suggest a morning awakening SOC low of about 85% - If my guess is close (??) Iโd call that fairly high!!
FWIW, with my former two Golf Cart 6v, I had no problem running a 1300+w Keurig coffee maker repeatedly (typically about a 2 min brew per cup), using a 1800w inverter, but not so with a 1500w microwave, because microwaveโs are heavily โreactiveโ loads (coffee makers are resistive)โฆSo, I swapped out the power sucking 1500w Microwave for a far more โRV practical 850w Panasonic modelโ which actually works out just perfectly!
Eventually I switched to a *better 2k watt pure-sine pass-thru (shore power) inverter-charger and using the same GC batteries could even run the 11kbtu Coleman air conditioner for short periods (compressor cycling, concurrent with solar), so with a coffee maker you should have no problemo!
To prevent nagging battery-to-inverter voltage sags (and inverter alarms - uggโฆ) its best to use robust sized battery cables - mine are heavy 0004 oughtโฆ Also, beyond the all the marketing hype behind inverter โadvertised watt ratingsโ youโll also want to know the inverterโs surge rating and the duration of surge conditionโฆKnow that not all inverterโs of the same wattage rating will handle a reactive load in quite the same way - Models that donโt spec these additional two stats should not be considered - JMHOโฆ
*4500w surge or 5 sec
FWIW, Iโve since ditched the GC batteries in favor of Lithium, which offer very little voltage sag along with a uber deep depth of discharge (DOD)โฆ
Hope this Helps ๐
3 tons
โSep-09-2022 07:37 PM
โSep-09-2022 05:55 PM
valhalla360 wrote:
How low are the existing batteries come morning?
A 600w coffee maker should pull around 50amps for maybe 10min for a total consumption of around 8.5amp-hr. That seems quite reasonable off a 200amp-hr battery bank unless they are borderline covering the overnight consumption.
As previously mentioned, mixing different battery types (doubly so with different ages) is not recommended.
โSep-09-2022 05:53 PM
campinghut wrote:
What is draining your batteries during the night. 200AH even 100AH should be enough for the coffee maker (one pot) for sure and the microwave will depend on the length of time. Maybe I am out to lunch on the amount of power needed
โSep-09-2022 04:26 PM
โSep-09-2022 03:52 PM
โSep-09-2022 02:56 PM
โSep-09-2022 02:39 PM
Can the Renogy 30A PWM charger charge both the AGM batteries and LiFe battery at the same time?
โSep-09-2022 01:49 PM