bobgarrett
Well-Known Member
A friend setting off for the Med dramatically reduced his fridge power consumption by replacing the insulation with vacuum insulation blocks. I'd never come across them before.
Well i suspect its calibrated wronglyNASA BM1
NASA BM1
I can put an alternator in a circuit with a completely goosed battery and the battery will show a healthy 14.1V, but it still has no charge in it when I disconnect the alternator. That graph only tells you the voltage of the circuit, not the resting voltage of the battery - therefore the voltage you're seeing tells you diddly squat about the charge-state of the battery.
You need to use a shunt to measure the state of the battery.
100% by 9am from solar alone is possible although this takes good conditions to achieve this. The case below recorded a month or so ago illustrates one example:Well i suspect its calibrated wrongly
Seeing 0 current doesn't mean you can use the voltage to give you state of charge - the solar input might be balancing the output. The only way to establish state of charge by voltage is to disconnect everything and leave the battery to rest for an hour or more, then read voltage and adjust for temperature. Even then, you can be lied to by surface voltage, which drops quickly to 10.5 under load (in my dead batteries).
You need a shunt to know how much charge goes in and out of the batteries.
You dont say how much solar capacity you have. From my experience with an energy efficient fridge, led lights everywhere and on my previous boat in the Uk 220w of solar, i could never manage full charge by 0900. I would need very good conditions to be charged by 1030am. The fridge was keel cooled and quite small. Since my comments refer to an installation with only 100w I find it hard to believe full charge can be achieved by 0900 with 100w of solar100% by 9am from solar alone is possible although this takes good conditions to achieve this. The case below recorded a month or so ago illustrates one example:
This morning I photographed the battery monitor app (a Pico). The solar regulators actually dropped back to float before I could take the photo. So I started another absorption cycle to show that the end amps had been reached.
So here the battery monitor is showing 100%. The solar controllers are regulating. The battery voltage is at the absorption voltage for these gel batteries. The end amps are at 4.36 amps, which is 0.7% of the nominal 600AHr battery capacity.
There are many definitions of 100% full lead acid batteries. The reality is actually that the battery SOC approaches the 100% in such a gradual way that a realistic definition is hard to standardise. The most common definition is when the battery charging drops to float, providing this is done at the correct point.
Most battery manufacturers suggest when the end amps reach 2-3% is the correct point. Many people suggest charging more aggressively holding the absorption phase for longer until the end amps reach 1 or even 0.5%. For gel batteries 1% is a good number so the 0.7% suggests the absorption phase has been held a little too long for this battery chemistry, but in practice the difference is only slight. At this SOC the end amps drop very rapidly so the difference in the time when these various definitions are reached is only small.
Note the time is 8:17.
Fully agree.If solar was the only means of charging the batteries I agree that 100w of solar is going to make it tough to reach 100% charge by 9am in the UK if running a typical fridge.
Hitting 100% by 10:30 in the UK with 220w of solar running a fridge is doing very well.
Our first yacht we only had 75w of solar and we could occasionally hit 100% by 9am in very good solar conditions, but this yacht had minimal electrical demand (although there were no LED lights in those days) and no fridge. Our current yacht has just over 1000w, but has much greater electrical demand.
The overall SOC of the batteries time taken to reach 100% was similar for both yachts, as the balance between consumption and production was similar.
One important factor is that we cruise in both summer and winter. Hence the solar array is sized to be adequate for winter conditions leaving an excess of power in summer. This excess power, when available, can be utilised with electric cooking etc, so the power is not wasted, but the net result is a high battery SOC early in the day when solar conditions are very good.