geem
Well-Known Member
Our lead bank is in the saloon. Since we spend all our time in the cockpit we leave the saloon cushions off over the battery box and leave the battery box lid off. The temperatures I quoted are for my batteries under this scenario. If I cover the batteries the batteries spend most of their time over 30degC even though the battery box is ventilated. The sea temperature is 27degC so little cooling effect from pulling ventilation air from the bilges.At least 30 degC is not 40deg C ... and so on. I think people generally take the hit on longevity caused by higher ambient temperatures. As you say, it is the combination of high ambient temperature, high rate of charge and discharge and the percentage of time at high SOC which cause degradation. I have a fan that is thermostatically controlled but that is only of value with high C charging or discharging when the pack exceeds the ambient temperature but the most I charge at is 0.3C which raises the temperature fairly minimally so I've never used it being UK based. A fairly common solution is to have the pack adjacent to the main cabin so it shares the temperature that is tolerable to the human occupants who will do their best to keep the air cool by whatever means.
Will Prowse has a good summary of the issues in this video ...
