check out the new remote control Jockey Wheel SmartBar Canegrowers rearview170 Cobb Grill Skid Row Recovery Gear Caravan Industry Association of Australia
Members Login
Username 
 
Password 
    Remember Me  
Post Info TOPIC: Battery power


Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 18
Date:
Battery power


 

i have 1600 watts of solar panels. and what to make my bus off the grid with power how many batteries and amp hours will it need to do so with them watts thx

 



__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 3066
Date:

It's not so much the WATTS you want. as the Watts you NEED
to run your bus. Start counting. Max. then actual needs to run.
THEN figure requirements.

And with that old girl. I'd be going GOOD quality wet cells over AGM etc.
Plenty of open air storage apace.
Exide extreme's etc. there are several.
Check for current best reputation on net.

Permanently on the panels. for 30 odd yrs. Yachts and vans.
My Extremes. and others, gave me an average of around 6 1\2 to 7plus yrs
per battery. Just check water levels regularly.
Keep up to a bottom of filler tube I found.
Hot climes, allow a little for expansion.
Will save a LOT of initial outlay and easier to top up if necessary.

I've had 2 AGM's (good ones $300plus each, then.). Calk after a coupla three yrs.
WHEN coupled to solar.

__________________


Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 18
Date:

I was thinking of going about 1600 amp hours of batteries

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 1933
Date:

Hi,

You have posted this request in two places on here??confuse Why ?

Please read my reply on the other one !!

Jaahn



__________________


Senior Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 348
Date:

Hi Missguided
if you are starting from scratch and want to live full time on a bus then typically you will need from 400Ah to 600Ah of LiFePo4 battery and a little more if a heavy user.
I disagree with Macka on the chemistry (I am currently running 1120Ah of AGM), any battery with lead in it is a waste of space nowdays, the only reason to run lead batteries is to compensate for an old charging regime if you already have it.



__________________
AJC


Veteran Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 25
Date:

Hi MissGuided,

(I see you've also posted this question under "Techies Corner" so I've repeated my reply below)

It all starts with how much power you're intending to use - as others have said.

Once we have the daily consumption, then we stand a chance of getting a system that works well.

If you're having trouble getting power consumption figures then maybe this will help:  http://12voltblog.com.au/how-much-power-does-12volt-stuff-use/

Cheers

       AJC



__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 4375
Date:

Solar panels provide the energy, batteries store some of it for use when it is not being produced.
How much storage is required depends on your power usage patterns when the panels are not producing sufficient power.
No one can answer your question definitively without knowing that.
Any battery type can do that job. Each type has different features and the particular features that are important to your application will vary.
They include weight, space and initial investment Vs anticipated life.

Cheers,
Peter

__________________

OKA196, 4x4 'C' Class, DIY, self contained motorhome. 960W of solar, 400Ah of AGMs, 310L water, 280L fuel. https://www.oka4wd.com/forum/members-vehicles-public/569-oka196-xt-motorhome
 

 



Senior Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 353
Date:

Hi
Misguided
What system lithium or Agm or flooded/wet ?
Assuming Agm
You need to have some idea of your consumption
batt sizing to solar
At a guide you will have 1/2ah to 1 ahr per watt
either 800ah or up to 1600 ahr
Remember batteries need filling to 100% almost every day for longevity so u will need performance which will then restrict u to around the 800ahr

Even thou its all theory ultimately u can only use what u can recharge .........


200 watts harvests produces 11 amps
Average sun at 100% is 5.5 hrs per day 4.5winter 6.5summer
5.5hr x 11 = 60.5ah less electrical loss 20%
60.5 - 20% =48.4 ahr harvest in 24 hr period
48.4x 8= 387.2ah

Mppt controller adds around 13% This was measured on panels at noon .
Panels laying flat potentially donot harvest as much



-- Edited by swamp on Wednesday 19th of April 2017 08:07:00 AM

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 3066
Date:

Bagmaker.
I said Wet cells. Basically as a lot don't have the instant cash to buy a bank of them
and definitely not those Li-Po things. They waay overrated and priced.
For the normal fella.

Also. Because if balanced with output and input. and kept floating by midday
I HAVE got 6 to 7 yrs out of my and others wet cells for decades.

IF you have the room. (Most do) I can't see the point in AGM's.
Specially If you not too flash with cash.
and the Wet cells do the job.

even though I have an 80w in latest (part time)van. With 200w panel.

They actually just what I had floating around from other jobs.
There's another 200w 48v panel leaning against the wall here too. One day.

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 1315
Date:

1600w @ 12v nom? Allowing for the general rule of thumb that you get 70% of the actual advertised capacity, 1600 x 0.7 = 1120w /12v = 93 amps charge rate. This is where battery chemistry is important, flooded cell will require a continuous charge rate of no more than 10% of the advertised capacity and will accept that rate till around 70% SOC, so that would require roughly 1,000Ah capacity, AGM have a better charge rate at 20% of the advertised capacity to the same 70% SOC, so they would require a min of 500Ah, Li (LiFeP04 or LiYFeP04) recommend around 50% of the advertised capacity, so 200Ah would handle the charge rate all the way to around 95% SOC, 400Ah to around 98% SOC. That means you could use all 400Ah out of the 400Ah Li battery and still fully recharge with the solar you have in 5 peak sun hrs, you can not do that with any form of lead acid battery whether it be flooded cell, AGM, Gel or Lead Crystal.

As far as cycle life, you plan to go full off grid but you don't mention if you also plan to use the batteries 24/7? You also have to consider how deeply you will discharge the battery pack, if down to 50% SOC each cycle you won't see 7 yrs out of the lead acid battery pack, maybe only discharged to 70% SOC you might be lucky to see 7 yrs, but then you haven't discharged the battery pack enough to accept the full charge rate your solar can put out, so now you would require an even bigger lead acid battery pack.

The formula might work for those that draw very little as far as discharge rate from small battery packs with small solar set ups, but it doesn't scale up, the increase in battery capacity needs to expand at a much higher rate. This is not the case with Li batteries, the formula remains constant, if you want 100 amps for 1 hr a 100Ah Li battery will deliver that yet still be at 12v under load at the end and recharge at least 1,000 times, to do the same thing from a lead acid battery will require 10 times that capacity and will only deliver all 100Ah for maybe 700 cycles at best. So you need to understand that it is not only how many watt hrs per 24hr but also the max discharge rate at any one time if you want to size a lead acid battery correctly, lithium only requires the number of watt hrs you want and that you have enough charging capacity to replace it.

T1 Terry

__________________

You can lead a head to knowledge but you can't make it think. One day I'll know it all, but till then, I'll keep learning.

Any links to any sites or products is not an endorsement by me or do I gain any financial reward for such links 



Senior Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 348
Date:

Macka the OP didn't state the amount he wanted to spend but its a good point.
LiFePo4 (NOT Li-Po) lithium is much cheaper per watt if used as a full time power supply.
Read that carefully (c h e a p e r) !!!
The initial outlay is slightly higher, sure, but the bang for buck is much stronger and goes for much longer.
Other motorhomers have settled on around 400-600 Ah of Li batt, double if using lead, simple fact is that if you want to spend time with a happy mrs -"All power too her".
But leave a bit extra for the beer fridge. As frugal as some may be -and good for you- a couple of hundred watts is just past backpacking.
A 12m bus has real estate above for 1.6kw of solar, may as well use it!


__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 1743
Date:

Bagmaker wrote:

Macka the OP didn't state the amount he wanted to spend but its a good point.
LiFePo4 (NOT Li-Po) lithium is much cheaper per watt if used as a full time power supply.
Read that carefully (c h e a p e r) !!!
The initial outlay is slightly higher, sure, but the bang for buck is much stronger and goes for much longer.
Other motorhomers have settled on around 400-600 Ah of Li batt, double if using lead, simple fact is that if you want to spend time with a happy mrs -"All power too her".
But leave a bit extra for the beer fridge. As frugal as some may be -and good for you- a couple of hundred watts is just past backpacking.
A 12m bus has real estate above for 1.6kw of solar, may as well use it!


 ditto



__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 1315
Date:

oldtrack123 wrote:
Bagmaker wrote:

Macka the OP didn't state the amount he wanted to spend but its a good point.
LiFePo4 (NOT Li-Po) lithium is much cheaper per watt if used as a full time power supply.
Read that carefully (c h e a p e r) !!!
The initial outlay is slightly higher, sure, but the bang for buck is much stronger and goes for much longer.
Other motorhomers have settled on around 400-600 Ah of Li batt, double if using lead, simple fact is that if you want to spend time with a happy mrs -"All power too her".
But leave a bit extra for the beer fridge. As frugal as some may be -and good for you- a couple of hundred watts is just past backpacking.
A 12m bus has real estate above for 1.6kw of solar, may as well use it!


 ditto


 

 

T1 Terry



-- Edited by T1 Terry on Tuesday 16th of May 2017 02:32:24 PM

__________________

You can lead a head to knowledge but you can't make it think. One day I'll know it all, but till then, I'll keep learning.

Any links to any sites or products is not an endorsement by me or do I gain any financial reward for such links 

Page 1 of 1  sorted by
 
Quick Reply

Please log in to post quick replies.

Tweet this page Post to Digg Post to Del.icio.us
Purchase Grey Nomad bumper stickers Read our daily column, the Nomad News The Grey Nomad's Guidebook