Poey50
Well-Known Member
I'm preparing a talk on LFP for a branch of the Cruising Association and thought I would road-test here my list of questions that people should ask themselves before jumping in.
The first set are general questions.
The first set are general questions.
- Do you need higher power capacity?
- Do you need the weight saving or volume saving that comes with LFP?
- Can you replenish the power without turning your vessel into an ungainly power station?
- Do you have the knowhow, or the willingness to learn the knowhow, or the financial means to pay someone with knowhow, to install a seaworthy and safe system?
- Can you afford the upfront costs?
- Will you be able to get insurance?
- Will your system meet emerging technical standards ISO and ABYC in the US – which will probably be the same.
- Will you be able to fix it, sufficiently to get out of trouble, especially if installed by someone else?
- How will you know if your LFP pack is about to disconnect?
- What will be the effect of a sudden disconnect and load dump?
- How are the alternator and sensitive marine electronics protected from the voltage spike caused by sudden disconnect?
- Is your BMS (or BMSs) set up as the final line of defence (catastrophic protection) or used for routine battery management?
- You are crossing a busy shipping lane at night under engine and you have a high voltage disconnect. What do you do to stay safe?
- If you have a dead short, will your fusing cope?
- Will you be able to use your system if the temperature drops below zero?
- Where relevant, how will your system cope with high ambient temperature?
- How will your system cope with high inrush currents from windlass, inverter, bow-thruster, electric winch?
- Will your system operate automatically, or mostly automatically, or will it require regular monitoring and manual switching?
- You have a complete black-out. Nothing electric works (a lightning strike?). What do you do?
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