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Post Info TOPIC: SOLAR BATTERY"S>


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RE: SOLAR BATTERY"S>


I have often wondered how people get by with just one battery and small solar, but after reading this I see that it's because you use gas for cooking, hot water, fridge etc.
Those have have A/C must rely on generators.
If that's what your happy with then certainly you have no need to consider anything else.

However for those like me that want to do away with gas and generators there really is only 1 option - LiFePo4
The ability to quick charge and to hold voltage when under load and to get 80% of the capacity out of them and that they love to be cycled (not just nearly full all the time, makes it a no brainer.
Coupled to the fact that we live in our bus 24/7 we are willing to spend the money on the comforts of home, much like you might get ducted reverse cycle inverter A/C's for you home.
While there may well be better technology to come in the future, I want my cake now, not when I'm 90 not out.

Yes Lithium are more expensive than wet cells or AGM (costings attached), but we don't buy things on price alone, it's a cost/(perceived) benefit that we look at.
Much like everyone doesn't drive around in the cheapest old technology cars. It's all a personal choice.

For me T1 has the runs on the board when it comes to Lithium, he is really the go to guru when you decide to go Lithium.
Yes he is a bit of an evangelist, but unlike some he has done the testing and he really knows his stuff.

Why this upsets people to such a great extent I don't know, knockers saying he has a vested interest doesn't make sense to me.
Would you buy and A/C from a plumbing shop, or would you prefer to hear from experience A/C sales and installers?

Anyway, for me the sums make sense, for others it will seem a complete waste of money - to each their own
I for one get really annoyed when people turn up at a peaceful bust camp and start their generators up - defeats the purpose in my eyes as I come for the peace and some interaction with the fauna.

Cheers.

AGM vs LFP.JPG



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Gday...

Impressive set-up El Gringo ... and you obviously have a set up to ensure you have maximum comfort for your chosen lifestyle.

Thanks for the expansive data showing the pros and cons of deciding between the two systems - given your requirements it was an open and shut case for you for sure.

I, too, live full time in my van ... a fantastic eight years on the road now. Best decision I ever made.

But my lifestyle requirements, especially regarding power needs, are considerably different to your own ... I guess I am just an old-fashioned old phart who doesn't want to live like those who remain in urban environments - I want, and I guess need, to get away from the rat race, rather than bring it all with me.

I don't even run the air con on the rare times I have access to 240v ... I prefer to be outside, under a shady tree (ideally with me plates of meat in the creek). Nights is for sleeping on the top of the bed ... or under the awning ... I hate air con.

And I must agree with you - Terry is extremely well-versed and credentialed in Lithium technology and I have seen good testimonials in various forums etc regarding his installations.

However, it gets a bit wearing when any particular unsolicited opinion, no matter how knowledgeable, is pushed when it has no bearing on one's needs or wants. 

Your requirements are far distant from mine ... and you have found the solution that meets them. However, my requirements are being met as well ... we just have differing outlooks on life and lifestyle.

Cheers - John



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2006 Discovery 3 TDV6 SE Auto - 2008 23ft Golden Eagle Hunter
Some people feel the rain - the others just get wet - Bob Dylan



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rockylizard wrote:
T1 Terry wrote:

As far as the 12.7v being 100% SOC for an AGM battery, can't agree and neither does the manufacturer if you check the chart, they start at 13v, after 1 hr @ a constant 6 amp load it looks to be somewhere around the 12.7v mark but that means 6Ah have been drawn from the 100Ah battery, so to me that indicates 12.7v represents around 94% charged (100 - 6 = 94)
As far as the 12.06v representing a caution voltage, no idea if this is while under the 6 amp load or rested and the manufacturers battery battery chart doesn't mention it either so......

The whole thing about only discharging to 12.4v for a longer life has me a little puzzled, are you actually drawing 20Ah @ 6 amps from each 100Ah battery or is this just a guestimation based on a voltage test... again, rested or under load? What I'm saying is, if you are only drawing a total of 40Ah over night then why use 2 batteries? A good 100Ah AGM battery should provide 40Ah over night if the load is only 6 amps max and do that for 600 cycles (600 over night discharges) which would equal quite a few yrs of ownership. So where is the value in 2 batteries doing the job one battery should be able to do without a problem? Twice the purchase price, twice the weight and twice the space taken up..... how much will it cost to replace the two batteries when the time comes to replace them?

T1 Terry


Gday...

Jest sayin' Terry. Ya gotta get to actually reading, understanding and retaining what posters say before you begin your torrent of advice. hmm

I have only ONE 120Ahr AGM and my 4 to 5 hours of power usage overnight reduces my ONE 120Ahr battery from 12.7V SOC as shown on solar controller to around 12.4V SOC when I rub the sleep from my peepers about 6.30am of a morning.

My solar panels then restore the battery to a float charge of 13.4 (through bulk and absorption) before lunchtime ... which they hold the battery at until the suns sinks slowly in the west . This has now been happening with boring repetition for about six years now.

I am fully aware you are deeply involved in Lithium sales, installation and service ... but if you want to maintain a credible reputation as an adviser on "all" battery systems, you need to temper how you read and interpret what users already have and need ... and then tailor your advice to what their ACTUAL needs/requirements are rather than your opinion (and potential cashflow requirements) thinks they should have.

Cheers - and thanks agen - John


Hmmm..... you jumped in and quoted something addressed to someone else and I can't see where you actually mentioned that you have only one AGM battery, so the "Batteries as pets" clearly wasn't typical of your useage and I apologies for what ever I said that has upset you.

 

Just as a matter of interest, if the majority of your energy storage comes from LPG, how much per yr does it cost you if you live 24/7 on the road in your van and free camp the majority of the time? Please correct me if I've miss interpreted that assumption and please don't take it as an attack, it is not intended that way but rather as a cost analysis over time.

I have always said that those who only move from mains supply to mains supply really have no use for a lithium battery set up and I question if a battery is required at all for such a use pattern. But you have put forward a use pattern I am not familiar with so a cost analysis would be useful to those who feel they may have a life style that matches your use pattern.

 

As far as making money when it comes to lithium batteries and RVs, T1 Lithium would be much better off sorting poor installs than actually designing and supplying, then it wouldn't have the obligation to provide tech support for the life of the system and warranty for any products supplied .... but that would hardly be fair because people would not have the option to get it done by us the first time with far less problems and a clear path for problem sorting they can be guided to do themselves via labelled photos and supporting emails. We would really be setting ourselves up to profiteer from those who fell into the trap of DIY because they thought they had no other option and that isn't the way I tick.

 That sort of sounds like if you don't get T1 Lithium to do the job then it won't be done right and that is not what I mean. There are companies out there that can actually do a decent lithium install, there are those that make it look super simply for a DIY install and lure unsuspecting folk into a rather expensive down hill spiral, I just attempt to advise that there are better options than lead acid batteries or drop in lithium batteries if their energy use patterns indicate it would be a better option.

 

T1 Terry   



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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

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Posts: 161
Date:
RE: SOLAR BATTERY


I believe that for every caravanner that "salesperson" Terry has completed an installation for, there would be several who have done their own installation using much or all of the information Terry has provided for free in various forums over the years. That's hardly the business model of someone trying to gouge the market for as much as they can extract from it. I think some repeated detractors need to MEET THE GUY so that they can soak up his ENTHUSIASM for this particular topic... it's an energy so rarely found these days. Interestingly, there's also those who promote their way of 4WD motor homing as the ultimate and peerless form of touring

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Date:
SOLAR BATTERY"S>


T1 Terry wrote:

Hmmm..... you jumped in and quoted something addressed to someone else and I can't see where you actually mentioned that you have only one AGM battery, so the "Batteries as pets" clearly wasn't typical of your usage and I apologies for what ever I said that has upset you. Not upset, just find opinions pushed down one's throat tiresome. confuse I simply suggest you go back and read my earlier posts

Just as a matter of interest, if the majority of your energy storage comes from LPG, how much per yr does it cost you if you live 24/7 on the road in your van and free camp the majority of the time?  Just calculated it ... about a 9Kg bottle per month - so probably between $350 and $400 per year - depending on how much cooking, and water heating, I do on the open fire. 

T1 Terry   


 Gday...

I have absolutely no issue with lithium as a product and I have read and heard sufficient to realise it has excellent capabilities for those who are off the grid 'full-time' AND have high power usage to complement their 'comfortable' lifestyle. It is just it would exceed the needs for my lifestyle and the cost, for my circumstances, are prohibitive.

The 'hard sell' that accompanies any mention of AGM usage by travellers becomes wearing. It definitely not, at this time of my life and at this time in my journey, the best outcome to contemplate given the considerable outlay to lithium. 

Cheers - John



-- Edited by rockylizard on Friday 1st of December 2017 08:56:01 AM

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Barboots wrote:

I believe that for every caravanner that "salesperson" Terry has completed an installation for, there would be several who have done their own installation using much or all of the information Terry has provided for free in various forums over the years. That's hardly the business model of someone trying to gouge the market for as much as they can extract from it. I think some repeated detractors need to MEET THE GUY so that they can soak up his ENTHUSIASM for this particular topic... it's an energy so rarely found these days. Interestingly, there's also those who promote their way of 4WD motor homing as the ultimate and peerless form of touring


Gday...

If your comments are due to anything I have posted on this thread, I feel you are not reading or understanding my comments very well. cry

I have no issue with, and in fact, I readily acknowledge, the extensive knowledge and experience and altruism displayed by Terry.

It just becomes tiresome when the 'hard sell' part of his "enthusiasm", as you call it, rears its head and the very biased 'sell' of lithium fills the posts.

Perhaps if Terry tempered his "enthusiasm" just a bit and focused on the NEEDS of travellers rather than assuming that everyone MUST get away from the 'out dated' AGM scenario to the rapturous world of turning all caravans/RVs into a 'bricks and mortar house' for power usage.

Great for those who want it ... but there are some (many?) who just want to leave that rat race well behind and are very content living 'foolishly' with AGMs.

cheers - horses for courses as they say ... I don't need a thoroughbred - John



-- Edited by rockylizard on Friday 1st of December 2017 09:46:37 AM

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Some people feel the rain - the others just get wet - Bob Dylan



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T1 Terry wrote:

Think I'd believe the manufacturer rather than a battery reseller, http://www.fullriver.com/products/admin/upfile/DC120-12B.pdf first chart on the right hand side, 6 amp discharge line is close enough to a C20 discharge rate, it gets much worse at a higher rate as you will see from the chart. Start voltage is 13v, at around the 10hr mark or 50% of a 20hr discharge, the line crosses the 12v mark. To me that says fully charged is 12.8v or better and 50% SOC is 12v.

As far the voltages and SOC for LiFeP04 batteries, who ever gave you those figures hasn't got a clue, you can not gauge an LFP or LYP battery SOC from terminal voltage over 4 cells, only fully charged or fully discharged by individual cell voltages. 0% SOC can still be better than 3v per cell in an LFP or LYP cell so 4 perfectly even cells would add up to 12v or more yet the full 100% of the advertised capacity had been used. An LFP or LYP cell should never be discharged lower than 2.8v but that is not the same as 0% SOC, it does mean the cell is now totally drained of all its capacity though and tat could mean more than the advertised capacity has been drained from the cell....... a whole different world to lead acid technology, the only thing they have in common is 13.8v represents approx. fully charged for a 12v battery, but that goes the same for both lead acid and LFP/LYP batteries, only the cell voltage tell the tale for Li and specific gravity for lead acid

 

T1 Terry


 As you suggested Terry, I think that I will go with the Manufacturer rather than the Battery Reseller, oops, but your a Battery Reseller aren't you Terry?



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Kebbin



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RE: SOLAR BATTERY


I can purchase a whole battery pack for the price of some high end battery .

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RE: SOLAR BATTERY"S>


Kebbin wrote:
T1 Terry wrote:

Think I'd believe the manufacturer rather than a battery reseller, http://www.fullriver.com/products/admin/upfile/DC120-12B.pdf first chart on the right hand side, 6 amp discharge line is close enough to a C20 discharge rate, it gets much worse at a higher rate as you will see from the chart. Start voltage is 13v, at around the 10hr mark or 50% of a 20hr discharge, the line crosses the 12v mark. To me that says fully charged is 12.8v or better and 50% SOC is 12v.

As far the voltages and SOC for LiFeP04 batteries, who ever gave you those figures hasn't got a clue, you can not gauge an LFP or LYP battery SOC from terminal voltage over 4 cells, only fully charged or fully discharged by individual cell voltages. 0% SOC can still be better than 3v per cell in an LFP or LYP cell so 4 perfectly even cells would add up to 12v or more yet the full 100% of the advertised capacity had been used. An LFP or LYP cell should never be discharged lower than 2.8v but that is not the same as 0% SOC, it does mean the cell is now totally drained of all its capacity though and tat could mean more than the advertised capacity has been drained from the cell....... a whole different world to lead acid technology, the only thing they have in common is 13.8v represents approx. fully charged for a 12v battery, but that goes the same for both lead acid and LFP/LYP batteries, only the cell voltage tell the tale for Li and specific gravity for lead acid

 

T1 Terry


 As you suggested Terry, I think that I will go with the Manufacturer rather than the Battery Reseller, oops, but your a Battery Reseller aren't you Terry?


:lol: No, we won't actually sell anyone a lithium battery, we custom design and manufacture lithium systems built from raw components and back that system with support for the life of the system.

We do resell AGM batteries that still have a bit of life left in them where someone living in an on site shed or caravan that needs a very basic power supply while building their house or wants one for a trolling motor used an hr a day for the Christmas holiday break..... but we sure don't tell them how great these batteries are wink These were replaced with a lithium battery system at the request of the RV owner for a reason, they didn't do what the owner required.

Talk up AGM all you like, they do suit a small section of the leisure battery market, but in general they are using a technology that is now far out dated based in the 19th century.  

 

T1 Terry



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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.

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Aus-Kiwi wrote:

I can purchase a whole battery pack for the price of some high end battery .


and??? I can sell you heaps of labelled Ah battery storage cheaper than you can buy them, but that doesn't actually mean you paid a good price per useable Wh of battery storage or a set up that is cheap to maintain, efficient or small/light enough not to cause problems. $$ per useable Wh over the cycle life of the battery, the true comparison of apples with apples, it is the technology used in your phone and computer for a reason wink 

 

T1 Terry 



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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 



Guru

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Date:

T1 Terry wrote:
Aus-Kiwi wrote:

I can purchase a whole battery pack for the price of some high end battery .


and??? I can sell you heaps of labelled Ah battery storage cheaper than you can buy them, but that doesn't actually mean you paid a good price per useable Wh of battery storage or a set up that is cheap to maintain, efficient or small/light enough not to cause problems. $$ per useable Wh over the cycle life of the battery, the true comparison of apples with apples, it is the technology used in your phone and computer for a reason wink 

 T1 Terry 


 Hi Terry smile

As usual you do not know when to stop in your quest to dominate every discussion. no The technology in your phone and computer is not the same. Indeed I believe you argued this some time back ? Give it a break and you might help your cause !

Jaahn



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Jaahn wrote:
T1 Terry wrote:
Aus-Kiwi wrote:

I can purchase a whole battery pack for the price of some high end battery .


and??? I can sell you heaps of labelled Ah battery storage cheaper than you can buy them, but that doesn't actually mean you paid a good price per useable Wh of battery storage or a set up that is cheap to maintain, efficient or small/light enough not to cause problems. $$ per useable Wh over the cycle life of the battery, the true comparison of apples with apples, it is the technology used in your phone and computer for a reason wink 

 T1 Terry 


 Hi Terry smile

As usual you do not know when to stop in your quest to dominate every discussion. no The technology in your phone and computer is not the same. Indeed I believe you argued this some time back ? Give it a break and you might help your cause !

Jaahn


Same technology, different chemistry, lithium ion exchange is the technology and different chemical combinations create different voltages and stability as well as weight per Wh.

Why the attack? It does you no good to demonstrate you don't have a good grasp of the differences, isn't there a well known saying regarding that biggrin   

 

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 

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