Wrenches;

I have quite a bit of experience with flooded lead-calcium vs. traditional flooded lead-antimony battery banks in remote, off-grid locations, over the course of the last 15 years. As always, your mileage may vary.

On the positive side, lead calcium cells have a low self-discharge rate, extremely low water usage, very long float service life, high discharge rate availability, and high DOD available (but not recommended). Adding water only every 1-2 *years* is common.

On the negative side, lead calcium cells are intended to live at 80%+ SOC for their whole lives, with only very rare DOD of 50%. If buying used Pb-Ca cells (for example from a utility or telco switching station) each DOD of more than 80% SOC is documented in writing. Banks must be sized much larger than lead-antimony to prevent this. Also, battery voltages are lower, and charging and equalization regimes are far different. Some charge controllers, inverters, other equipment, etc. do NOT have settings to use Pb-Ca, some do.

In the best case scenarios I've dealt with here (oversized battery bank of surplus cells), I've seen 10+ years service life from *used* cells. In the worst case scenarios, life of less than 2 years (too many deep DOD cycles).

DAN FINK
Buckville Energy Consulting LLC

Mark Frye wrote:
Todd,
Can you give us a comparison of lead vs lead cadmium? My understanding is that lead cadmium are suited for standby operations such as telecomm back up. That means spending most of the time in float, with occasional short term high discharge rate with very high DOD available. How well do they cross over into a daily-cycle off-grid situation with moderate daily DOD? Mark Frye
Berkeley Solar Electric Systems
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