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Date:         Wed, 13 Feb 2008 14:23:26 -0600
Reply-To:     Larry Alofs <lalofs@GMAIL.COM>
Sender:       Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From:         Larry Alofs <lalofs@GMAIL.COM>
Subject:      Re: Sure Power 1315 question > monitoring battery
Comments: To: Michael Elliott <camping.elliott@gmail.com>
In-Reply-To:  <47B3182F.9040003@gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1

Mike, Do you happen to know what the temperature the table is for?

thanks, Larry A.

On Feb 13, 2008 10:17 AM, Michael Elliott <camping.elliott@gmail.com> wrote:

> The state of charge of a battery can indeed be determined with a > voltmeter, but the battery needs to be disconnected from any loads for an > hour or so to allow the battery voltage to stabilize. If you read the > voltage while it is powering something then the voltage reading will be > dragged down by the load, and cannot be used to determine the battery's > state of charge. > > For a generic flooded-cell lead acid 12 volt battery, here's the > relationship between no-load voltage and state of charge. > > No-load Voltage Percent Charge > >12.6 100% > 12.45-12.6 75-100% > 12.24-12.45 50-75% > 12.06-12.24 25-50% > 11.7-12.06 0-25% > <11.7 0% > > Measuring the specific gravity of the electrolyte with a hydrometer is a > more accurate method of determining state of charge. With totally sealed > batteries this is not possible. > > A chart illustrating specific gravity and no-load voltage vs charge is at > > http://www.semarine.com/store/home.php?cat=86 > > More information about measuring methods is at > > http://www.rpc.com.au/products/batteries/car-deepcycle/carfaq9.htm#charged > > They list, in decreasing order of accuracy: > > 1. Measuring charging current under specific conditions, > 2. Measuring with a hydrometer after the battery has stabilized, then > "temperature compensate, and compare the average of the readings with the > battery's manufacturer's Specific Gravity definition of a cell in a fully > charged battery," and > 3. Measuring with an "accurate (.5% or better) digital voltmeter" after > the battery has stabilized, then "temperature compensate, and compare the > reading with the battery's manufacturer's [no-load] definition of a fully > charged battery." > > When we camp the battery is either being charged (by solar) or running > something so the battery voltage or specific gravity are both pretty > useless for determining charge. > > So given all that, we use a battery monitor which seems to give me > reliable readings. It monitors energy going in and coming out of the > battery and displays how much capacity is available, like a fuel gauge. > Here's the one we use -- > http://www.xantrex.com/web/id/96/p/1/pt/7/product.asp -- there may be > others. Not inexpensive, and a bit of wiring is needed but works for me. > > Battery monitors (AKA "coulomb counters") are not perfect because modeling > the complex electro-chemical characteristics of a lead acid battery is not > trivial, but with appropriate programming (they are programmable) they are > darn accurate,* much more accurate than using a voltmeter, and miles more > practical than probing around in a sulfuric acid-filled battery with a > hydrometer in one hand and a flashlight in the other: the electrolyte in > question is also called "battery acid" -- I'm know I'm too spastic to be > trusted around that stuff. > > ============ > * I've programmed mine to know that the battery is a 130Ah one, and that > it is fully-charged when the charge voltage is 14.4 volts or more and the > charger (solar or tender or engine) is able to hold that voltage with less > than 200mA of current for more than 1 minute. Once those conditions have > been met, the monitor resets itself to display 100% charge. Before it > resets itself it's only off 100% by a percentage or so, so the modeling > seems to be close enough. When the battery is powering stuff, the monitor > measures discharge amps and time, curves the results and calculates > amp-hours remaining. > > -- > Mike "Rocket J Squirrel" Elliott > 71 Type 2: the Wonderbus > 84 Westfalia: Mellow Yellow ("The Electrical Banana") > 74 Utility Trailer. Ladybug Trailer, Inc., San Juan Capistrano > KG6RCR > > > > On 2/12/2008 10:23 PM Loren Busch wrote: > > > My aux battery is a 110 AH AGM, under the back seat. I've had no sign > of > > problems because my starting battery is a stock Group 41 lead-acid > battery. > > The volt meter seems to give me all the info I need so far. A more > > sophisticated (and much more expensive) battery monitor that shows > actual % > > capacity would be nice but I didn't go that way. Also more complex > install. > > > > On Feb 12, 2008 10:05 PM, Jeffrey Vickers <jeff@vickersdesign.com> > wrote: > > > >> Thanks, Loren. What sort of aux battery do you have? I'm guessing that > >> since I'm not using an AGM type of battery for my aux, the 110V charger > >> won't care too much that my two batteries don't match. Are you finding > that > >> a voltmeter is sufficient to tell you how much juice you have left in > your > >> aux battery? > >> > >> >


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