Hello Travis,

I think that 2 days is not enough battery autonomy in the Ozarks and many other 
locations unless you have a fossil fuel generator to carry you through long 
cloudy periods. Battery autonomy is site and load specific. I've done systems 
with as little as 1 day and as much as 3 weeks at 80% depth of discharge. 
Lately, I've been generically specing 1.5 days of autonomy at 50% d.o.d. to get 
the dialogue started with the customer.

I use to spec up to 4 parallel strings of T-105s or L-16s in 2, 4, and 8 
batteries in series, but now I keep the number of strings down to 3 or less and 
prefer 1 or 2 strings of big 2-volt cells to reduce the number of cells and 
connections.

Southern California urban and suburban grid-tie PV systems are almost all 
non-battery although we still get asked about emergency power - until they hear 
how much it adds to the cost of a grid-tie PV system.

Joel Davidson
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Travis Creswell 
  To: 'RE-wrenches' 
  Sent: Tuesday, December 01, 2009 2:15 PM
  Subject: Re: [RE-wrenches] Other's thoughts on Autonomy? was 
concordbatteries, EQUALIZE Them!


  IMHO, one of the worst design boo-boo's is going past more then 2 days of 
autonomy.  Personally, I no longer size much over one day because it's my 
anecdotal observation that most batteries die of old age and being ignored long 
before cycles get them.  Speaking mostly about quality deep cycle flooded.

   

  Lots of good things result;

  -50%-75% smaller battery bank means a $20,000 battery bank just turned into 
$5,000 bank which frees up a ton of money for more modules and now-a-days you 
can buy a lot more PV with that money.  More array mean far less reliance on 
autonomy.  I'll take the trade all year long.  In the summer we have 3 to 4 
weeks of sun and one day of clouds and in the winter we get 3 to 4 week 
stretches with 1 sunny day.  Autonomy doesn't really matter in either case from 
what I've seen.  The larger the bank means more self discharge losses, which on 
large battery banks gets significant as they age.  5-15 years later you'll 
still have all that array but no matter what you're looking at new battery bank.

   

  -If you study the quality deep cycle manufacturers literature you'll see that 
you'll see that anything over 1 day of autonomy is too much to allow the array 
to actually charge the battery bank anywhere near the recommended amps and just 
like rust, sulfation never sleeps.

   

  -Less cells to water

   

  -Less space required

   

  -Given that a surprisingly high percentage of off gridders totally screw up 
on their first bank, no matter how much we all try we might as keep the stupid 
tax of replacing a 2.5 yr old battery bank to a minimum.

   

  -All of this discussion about cross paralleling, buss bars, TLC with a 
gazillion connections and multiple strings goes away.

   

  -And the best part is we don't have to carry all of the lead into the 
basement and even better back out of the basement!

   

  Just my .02.  Feel free to strongly disagree but let's be polite about it.

   

  Travis Creswell

  Ozark Energy Services

   

   

   


------------------------------------------------------------------------------

  From: re-wrenches-boun...@lists.re-wrenches.org 
[mailto:re-wrenches-boun...@lists.re-wrenches.org] On Behalf Of R Ray Walters
  Sent: Tuesday, December 01, 2009 12:44 PM
  To: RE-wrenches
  Subject: Re: [RE-wrenches] concord batteries, EQUALIZE Them!

   

   

  I used to think that one string was optimal; until I had a single cell 
failure take out an entire system for weeks. (try operating a 24 v system at 
22v! )

  I now think that 2 parallel strings is optimum,  3 is OK, and 4 is max.

  At 4 parallel strings, we start spending more time looking to make sure all 
connectors are the same exact length etc. to insure equal operation.

  But of course how do you account for varying internal resistance of the 
batteries......??

  I've done 4 parallel strings at 144 DC of sealed batteries on an electric 
vehicle, but we were very careful with our resistances, I even switched to 
smaller wire, on closer strings, and calculated out the exact resistance, so 
all strings were theoretically equal. This set actually just died, but achieved 
its manufacturer's predicted cycle life. (B&B battery, 350 cycles to 80% DOD)

  So if you're careful, 4 strings can work well.

  Worst I've seen was 20 golf carts paralleled in a 12 v system, (10 strings) 
and they didn't pull the main connections from across the set, just connected 
to one end.

  The results were very predictable, with the furthest batteries being 
chronically under charged, and the closest ones being over cycled to a 
premature death.

   

  Ray Walters

   

   

  On Dec 1, 2009, at 11:28 AM, wind...@wind-sun.com wrote:





  You gotta wonder about why the customer bought such a battery layout, or why 
the installer sold that kind of configuration (which ever it was) with so many 
small batteries. We would never recommend going over 2 parallel banks, but 
sometimes the "customer knows best...".

   

   



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