cagey
Well-Known Member
My BEP smart monitor has packed up, it is at least 15 years old, what is a modern replacement please. 3 banks 2house and 1 engine 12v .
Thanks
K
Thanks
K
Here's another one MICTUNING Digital Multimeter, DC 6.5-100V 0-100A LCD Amperage Power Energy Meter DC Volt Amp Testing Gauge Monitor LCD Blue Backlight Digital Display with 100A/75mV External Shunt: Amazon.co.uk: Car & MotorbikeDoes anyone have any experience with the cheapo shunt battery monitors, like this. £45 for a 350A version. I've ordered one that I was going to test with a basic domestic (non-boat) Solar system, before maybe getting one for the boat.
Presumably the OP will need a different shunt for each bank, maybe individual displays too? That would add up pretty quickly at Victron prices.
Yes, I fitted one of those 350A units.. What can I say, it just worked...
Caveats: It works by you configuring the unit with the amount of Amp/hrs in your system. You manually tell the unit when 100% is reached. It subtracts Amp/hr total as current flows out.
- I believe this approach is pretty standard.
Thanks. I've got one of those with a more basic shunt (without any circuitry). I've not used it a great deal and might have wired it up wrong, but I think it doesn't differentiate between amps going into, or amps coming out of the battery. Meaning it just counts amps and adds them up, which doesn't give any indication of the amps left in the battery at any one point. Apparently its possible to use two of these systems on each of the input and draw negatives, but that seems a bit of a pain.
Would there be a way of testing whether a cheaper meter took this into account? Maybe just running a battery down to a set voltage at 5amp and then 10amps, and see if it does the maths? Presumably the monitors also take into account voltage?Proper battery monitors adjust the Ah reading to take account of the Peukert exponent, and also the charge efficiency factor. Cheap meters don't do this.
Would there be a way of testing whether a cheaper meter took this into account? Maybe just running a battery down to a set voltage at 5amp and then 10amps, and see if it does the maths? Presumably the monitors also take into account voltage?
Proper battery monitors adjust the Ah reading to take account of the Peukert exponent, and also the charge efficiency factor. Cheap meters don't do this.
Yes, you are right.
Question:
Would it be fair to say that the Peukert exponent becomes significant at higher current draw ie > 30amp/hr? For those of us with fridge/autoHelm being the highest draw (<10amp/hr combined) than would you say that the likely effect effect of not having that feature should be low?
I couldn't fault my old SmartGauge Electronics - Homepage