Friday, May 22, 2020 at 20:13
When I did my conversion from AGM to lithium,
Ev-power told me that although the ideal setup was dedicated lithium chargers, in a camping environment lead-acid chargers with suitable selectable voltages were ok.
So my mains charger, dc to dc and solar regulator are all lead-acid chargers but all have suitable selectable voltages. Only one is ever in use at a time, so like HKB, when the battery is fully charged I turn off the relevant charger and turn it on again when needed. Fully manual, no smarts except the stages within the chargers and if I don't turn off the charger there is no real issue because the "error" is short term and the float voltage is within the battery spec for the period the charger is on, so no big deal.
Each of my chargers, when I turn it on, goes into bulk mode. So if the partially discharged battery is at, say 13.2 volts, and I turn a charger on it will start in bulk and complete a full cycle. All three chargers, when they go into the constant voltage segment (absorption) don't stay there long and drop into float within maybe 20 minutes, so they're almost as good as dedicated lithium chargers. (With my old 315Ah AGM battery bank they would stay in absorption for hours.)
Being manual, it is not the most efficient system, but I have an abundance of capacity and an abundance of solar for my needs so if I miss the mark a bit it doesn't matter.
In my camping environment the battery typically floats (wrong term, perhaps) between 50 and 100% SOC. And the beauty with lithium is that if you get a prolonged period of poor sun you can
wallow around in the 20 to 30% SOC area for as long as required with no detriment to the battery.
For storage I discharge the battery to about 70% and disconnect the negative to isolate it.
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