Hi Mark,

I am a real stickler about terms and I hope to always further understanding 
about batteries so consider this: No charge controller "tapers" charge current. 
The reduction in current is due to the slowing of the electrochemical process 
as the battery is saturated. At constant voltage, you can provide any amount of 
amperage to the battery but it will only absorb what it can. This is a common 
misconception that I hear regularly.

Once the battery reaches equilibrium, that is, current into the battery equals 
the self discharge rate, then it is in float. The process to reach float stage 
is called absorption stage. So I suppose we could call the two stages Bulk and 
Absorb/Float.

Larry Crutcher
Starlight Solar Power Systems





On Apr 11, 2013, at 9:43 AM, m...@hurshtown.com wrote:

I see what you mean by no float/3rd stage.  Indeed the MPPT500 just tapers off 
the amps once it reaches the "float" voltage.

The MPPT250 however does have an undocumented(?) mode where once it thinks the 
battery is thoroughly charged, it only puts a brief burst of charge into the 
battery when the voltage sags to something like 13.8V.  The first time I 
encountered this I thought I had a bad controller.  This really does represent 
a form of float charge.

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