This was taken while there was no demand and a full charge on the bank. Production on the bottom, demand on the top. Will a photo of my charge controller screen at the same time help interpret real SOC?
Socal Tom wrote:-Note- This thread is about to get spammed by some people that will tell you my estimates are wrong and argue about the exact voltage and a bunch of other stuff. I shared how I interpret these things, and I believe most of us weekend warriors will find my method to be good enough for our intended use.
Tom
TimC wrote:Socal Tom wrote:. While I'd like to go LiFePo4 I doubt I'll have the funds to sink that kind of money into it. I'm not considering the long term costs. Just what I'll be able to spend at the time. What little research I have done on those I have come to the conclusion that when compared to AGM the AGM's performance (life) is almost always under stated and the LiFePo4s will have perfect performance. How about that statement for drumming up some disagreement? Hee hee.
Thanks again.
Tim
TimC wrote:Socal Tom wrote:. While I'd like to go LiFePo4 I doubt I'll have the funds to sink that kind of money into it. I'm not considering the long term costs. Just what I'll be able to spend at the time. What little research I have done on those I have come to the conclusion that when compared to AGM the AGM's performance (life) is almost always under stated and the LiFePo4s will have perfect performance. How about that statement for drumming up some disagreement? Hee hee.
Thanks again.
Tim
Socal Tom wrote:After you use a few times and monitor it you can get a feel for what its got left. There are charts like this onein the morning before the solar starts charging see what the voltage is and compare to the chart. For example if it says you used about 30% because voltage is 12.3 ish, then the watts you used would be about 30% of capacity. In my case, my 85AH battery is acting more like 100AH.
Tom
TimC wrote:Socal Tom wrote:After you use a few times and monitor it you can get a feel for what its got left. There are charts like this onein the morning before the solar starts charging see what the voltage is and compare to the chart. For example if it says you used about 30% because voltage is 12.3 ish, then the watts you used would be about 30% of capacity. In my case, my 85AH battery is acting more like 100AH.
Tom
I have a chart like this on my utility cabinet door. I just didn't know that part you mentioned above for calculating capacity. It'll get me in the ballpark for sure. Very cool. After a night of use (fridge, fans, lights) I'll take a reading and do some gozintas. Should the battery be at rest for a period before reading volts? Or is a morning after reading good enough?
Thanks again
Tim
Socal Tom wrote:-Note- This thread is about to get spammed by some people that will tell you my estimates are wrong and argue about the exact voltage and a bunch of other stuff. I shared how I interpret these things, and I believe most of us weekend warriors will find my method to be good enough for our intended use.
Tom
saltydawg wrote:Socal Tom wrote:-Note- This thread is about to get spammed by some people that will tell you my estimates are wrong and argue about the exact voltage and a bunch of other stuff. I shared how I interpret these things, and I believe most of us weekend warriors will find my method to be good enough for our intended use.
Tom
Well your wrong, there I said it. Now in real life I dont know that meter, and sounds like you do so your probably right.
but your still wrong
saltydawg wrote:Socal Tom wrote:-Note- This thread is about to get spammed by some people that will tell you my estimates are wrong and argue about the exact voltage and a bunch of other stuff. I shared how I interpret these things, and I believe most of us weekend warriors will find my method to be good enough for our intended use.
Tom
Well your wrong, there I said it. Now in real life I dont know that meter, and sounds like you do so your probably right.
but your still wrong
TimC wrote:I recently installed Bayite ammeters to measure the solar generation and my power usage from the battery bank. I understand that if I maintain a good SOC on the voltage that I can just compare Wh on the generation side and Wh on the demand side and see that I am recovering well each day. What else am I looking at? Will SOC tell me anything about my battery capacity and whether it is diminishing? It's AGM batteries so I can't really do a hydrometer test.
This was taken while there was no demand and a full charge on the bank. Production on the bottom, demand on the top. Will a photo of my charge controller screen at the same time help interpret real SOC?
TimC wrote:The nice thing is I'm camping and if I run out of power it isn't the end of the world. ...I'll still be able to function without the phone.
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