My solar trailer with two 500 AMP 48 volt forklift batteries appear to use a Midnight Solar charge controller to control the 2500Kw PV array 24/7 when the Sunny Island inverters are powered down. The trailers stacked Sunny Islands are currently powered down for the winter barring emergencies. When I check the Midnight Solar display, the readout indicates Float charge on the Midnight Solar when the sun is out, and it has done do for several weeks. The only loads on the batteries would be two de-sulphinators and the midnight solar device. The trailer can send power to my house and create AC coupled microgrid with my other solar arrays, but I still need to run additional cabling and possibly change parameters on the unit to tie the Inverters to grid power and leave the inverters running. I managed to break my ankle a month ago and it is going to be another 6 weeks before I can put any weight on it so working on the trailer is on hold. Unfortunately weather does not wait for broken ankles so yesterday morning I lost utility power. The expected duration was longer than I really wanted to wait so hobbled around and swapped over to the trailer power for the duration of the outage. When I turned the Sunny Island Inverters on they reported a 51% state of charge for the same two batteries. There is 7 KW diesel with limited fuel, so I cranked up the generator and let it run.for about an hour. When I got notice the power came back I went out and the Inverter reported 71% SOC. The batteries are roughly 500 AMPs each in parallel. I do not know what the house load was but a guess would be not more than 2 KW. In theory that meant that the Inverter was sending 5KW (104) amps from the diesel into the batteries for one hour. If I assume a straight line charge curve in this range at best the charge should have gone from 510 amps (1000 *51%) to 614 Amps or 61%. There was no solar gain (dark and foggy). So the question of the day is which one to trust to determine battery charge, the Midnight Solar being in float or the Sunny Island that had just been turned on?.
The Sunny Island documentation claims that the SOC reading is not just a battery voltage lookup table, it claims that the inverter is constantly testing the battery to determine its actual capacity and adjusting the SOC so it is reflecting the true SOC based on cthe urrent battery condition. I have seen it up to 100% earlier in the fall once or twice but have also seen he mismatch between Midnight Solars Float mode (implying full charge) and the Inverter SOC when its been powered down for awhile. Ideally I would equalize the batteries and see what happens but crawling around the trailer with crutches and one foot is not filling battery cells is not going to happen for few months. I have equalized in the past on the Midnight Solar by turning on the equalization mode and letting it run on Solar input only but did not pay attention to SOC on the inverter. The Sunny Island is supposed to equalize the batteries on some internal timer or algorithim but I have not seen it try to initiate one.
The Sunny Island documentation claims that the SOC reading is not just a battery voltage lookup table, it claims that the inverter is constantly testing the battery to determine its actual capacity and adjusting the SOC so it is reflecting the true SOC based on cthe urrent battery condition. I have seen it up to 100% earlier in the fall once or twice but have also seen he mismatch between Midnight Solars Float mode (implying full charge) and the Inverter SOC when its been powered down for awhile. Ideally I would equalize the batteries and see what happens but crawling around the trailer with crutches and one foot is not filling battery cells is not going to happen for few months. I have equalized in the past on the Midnight Solar by turning on the equalization mode and letting it run on Solar input only but did not pay attention to SOC on the inverter. The Sunny Island is supposed to equalize the batteries on some internal timer or algorithim but I have not seen it try to initiate one.
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