Hi to everyone . I'm new to this forum, but not to pv solar
I have a working system installed, but would like to add batts
Please tell me if I can/should safely add 4 more 6 volt batteries to my system.
I now have:
4-24v panels feeding (2 panels per morningstar mppt 15 controller)
2-15 amp mppt controlers feeding
a 12v-450ah (4-6 volt series/parallel) battery bank feeding
a 12v 5k inverter feeding
various houshold loads
My goal is to keep my 12v inverter (not change to a 24v or 48v system but still add more more battery capacity.
I would like to add 4 more 6v batts series/parallel to keep a 12v bank but increase amp hours by 1/3 (2 more 6v) OR 1/2 (4 more 6v)
When I researched this question I found this...
Battery banks with multiple strings are more likely to develop cells with unequal states of charge. Weak cells will be difficult to detect because they will “steal” from the surrounding cells. The system will suffer as a whole and will cost you more in the long run. Dankoff, Windy. "Batteries: How to keep Them Alive for Years & Years...." Home Power Magazine #69. Feb. - Mar. 1999. 46-47.
I understand the concept. Too many strings cause imbalance in indidvidual batts.
It seems evident that I can add multiple strings (6v batts connected in series to create 12v string to be paralleled to the exsisting bank) since I will use 2 controllers feeding opposite ends of the battery bank.
I'm using all matched batts. GC2 6 volt golf cart. My oldest are 6 months old with maybe 50 duty cycles. never drawn below 12v
Questions
Will my 6 month old batts be extremely mismatched with new batts ?
How much of an imbalance is too much ? current range is 7v - 6.8v
I currently have no way to isolate for testing besides disconnecting cables. Would you recommend a blade type cutoff or those cable ends with a rotary cutoff built in ? Or is there something better for high amps ? I'm trying to avoid more fuses.
All serious comments are welcomed
Thanks in advance
I have a working system installed, but would like to add batts
Please tell me if I can/should safely add 4 more 6 volt batteries to my system.
I now have:
4-24v panels feeding (2 panels per morningstar mppt 15 controller)
2-15 amp mppt controlers feeding
a 12v-450ah (4-6 volt series/parallel) battery bank feeding
a 12v 5k inverter feeding
various houshold loads
My goal is to keep my 12v inverter (not change to a 24v or 48v system but still add more more battery capacity.
I would like to add 4 more 6v batts series/parallel to keep a 12v bank but increase amp hours by 1/3 (2 more 6v) OR 1/2 (4 more 6v)
When I researched this question I found this...
Battery banks with multiple strings are more likely to develop cells with unequal states of charge. Weak cells will be difficult to detect because they will “steal” from the surrounding cells. The system will suffer as a whole and will cost you more in the long run. Dankoff, Windy. "Batteries: How to keep Them Alive for Years & Years...." Home Power Magazine #69. Feb. - Mar. 1999. 46-47.
I understand the concept. Too many strings cause imbalance in indidvidual batts.
It seems evident that I can add multiple strings (6v batts connected in series to create 12v string to be paralleled to the exsisting bank) since I will use 2 controllers feeding opposite ends of the battery bank.
I'm using all matched batts. GC2 6 volt golf cart. My oldest are 6 months old with maybe 50 duty cycles. never drawn below 12v
Questions
Will my 6 month old batts be extremely mismatched with new batts ?
How much of an imbalance is too much ? current range is 7v - 6.8v
I currently have no way to isolate for testing besides disconnecting cables. Would you recommend a blade type cutoff or those cable ends with a rotary cutoff built in ? Or is there something better for high amps ? I'm trying to avoid more fuses.
All serious comments are welcomed
Thanks in advance
Comment