Do any of those other forums for bulk buys @Poey50? As shipping is expensive it might help with costs. If i understood that video right he got 16cells for $1700 which is £
$106.25 per cell Or $425 for a 4 cell 280aH bank. Today that would be £326!
@Poey50 got a link to that group buy? Have searched; cannot find it!
Thanks. Never saw that one!
Amy just replied; £375 inc shipping and bus bars. Ex any UK tax. That is for 4x280Ah cells.
Ok I liked and respected the input from the people that have gone down this route. I am a long term user of lithium batteries from competitive radio controlled model car racing. I understand the chemistry and the charge/discharge characteristics. Of course LiPo will make lead acid look like a joke. Until the lipo catches fire and burns your boat down.Energy density is a big gain, but not the only one and not necessarily the most important one for liveaboard cruisers. Here's a list from the useful Nordkyn design site.
- Lithium batteries don’t suffer from low charge or deep discharge (down to a limit) and easily offer more than twice the usable storage for the same nominal capacity.
- They charge much faster; they can literally absorb all of the available current until almost full.
- They are near 100% current-efficient, 1Ah in means about 0.997Ah out: they waste very little energy. This also means no lengthy, wasteful absorption during which good electricity is turned into heat and gases.
- They hardly suffer from cycling in marine applications.
- They hardly self-discharge over time (provided they were never abused).
- They provide a noticeably higher and much more constant system voltage during discharge, over 13 volts.
- They are much lighter, much less toxic than lead-acid cells, fully sealed and don’t generate explosive gases, even internally.
- They last many times longer than a lead-acid bank while providing much higher performance throughout, provided they are treated correctly.
Ok I liked and respected the input from the people that have gone down this route. I am a long term user of lithium batteries from competitive radio controlled model car racing. I understand the chemistry and the charge/discharge characteristics. Of course LiPo will make lead acid look like a joke. Until the lipo catches fire and burns your boat down.
I am not saying it will! But its easy to demonstrate. If I take a lipo and puncture the cell structure... it will catch fire. Its a big fire that is very hard to put out.
Just saying. You can stop and hop out of your Tesla. Bit harder on the sea.
Its not for me.
fwiw theres a recent article on Morgans Cloud (paywalled) that describes just such a device, though I believe it is an alternator controller.If there's no monitoring of the actual battery current e.g. by a battery monitor shunt, then that might be needed.
All these digital controlled chargers 'ought' to be reprogrammable to suit any battery chemistry.
They are essentially programmable voltage/current controlled converters.
Whether it's in the manufacturer's interest to give away or sell suitable new firmware instead of flogging new chargers to people keen to spend a lot on batteries might be a different question.
fwiw theres a recent article on Morgans Cloud (paywalled) that describes just such a device, though I believe it is an alternator controller.
Brill. Please expand. Mark.I think you are number 5, possibly 6, in an occasional series on this thread of people who pop up to demonstrate how little they understand how LiFePO4 is different to other lithium ion chemistries.
Brill. Please expand. Mark.
I think you are number 5, possibly 6, in an occasional series on this thread of people who pop up to demonstrate how little they understand how LiFePO4 is different to other lithium ion chemistries.
Arh... Researching here: BatteryStuff Articles | Overview of the Different Types of Lithium Batteries on the Market
Yes... I did not appreciate LifePO4
Quote:
LiFePO4 (also known as Lithium Iron Phosphate) batteries are a huge improvement over lead acid in weight, capacity and shelf life. The LiFePO4 batteries are the safest type of Lithium batteries as they will not overheat, and even if punctured they will not catch on fire. The cathode material in LiFePO4 batteries is not hazardous, and so poses no negative health hazards or environmental hazards. Due to the oxygen being bonded tightly to the molecule, there is no danger of the battery erupting into flames like there is with Lithium-Ion. The chemistry is so stable that LiFePO4 batteries will accept a charge from a lead-acid configured battery charger. Though less energy-dense than the Lithium-Ion and Lithium Polymer, Iron and Phosphate are abundant and cheaper to extract so costs are much more reasonable. LiFePO4 life expectancy is approximately 5-7 years.
That's the Wakespeed 500 external alternator regulator. It measures current as well as voltage and alternator temperature to regulate output so is seen as s step up from the Balmar ext regulator which just uses voltage and alternator and temperature and seems popular with those who have big LFP banks. But ££££s.
Seems a bit daft to name a regulator 'VSR' when it's a well known term in the same field, meaning 'Voltage Sensing Relay'.I have the predecesor alternator regulators (named VSR) to the Wakespeed 500...