Dan,

Last week I had a 3+ year old Trojan L16H-AC with one dead middle cell, SG 
shows water. The bank has 8 batteries and the customer is diligent about 
maintenance and charging. I wish I knew why this happens but it seems over the 
last few years like there is a pattern with Trojan L16’s.  

 Larry


On Nov 22, 2015, at 7:49 AM, Dan Fink <danbo...@gmail.com> wrote:

Esteemed Wrenches;

I'm looking for input on what could be going on with a battery bank at the 
college I teach for. It's a stand-alone system with 4 Trojan 12v T-1275 in 
series / parallel for 24v, 660w of PV, running only a drainback solar hot water 
system for space heating. So, 3 pumps and 3 DTCs, max load 100 watts and 
doesn't run all that often, outback CC is usually in float. The batteries are 
only 2.5 years old and are regularly maintained.

My lab class tested and maintained the battery bank last week, and on one 
battery there was one cell, in the middle of the battery, with a SG so low it 
wouldn't even register on our refractometer or midnite hydrometer. That battery 
reads about 0.2v lower than the others. All the other cells in that battery 
read reasonable SG, with 2 cells on the downstream side reading SG slightly 
low, but still in reasonable range. This was of course all before topping up 
the electrolyte with distilled water.

Our troubleshooting exercise looked at:
~ Measurement error? Nope, I was right there supervising and 2 different lab 
classes got the same results with 2 different instruments;
~ Stratification? A suspicion especially since the system is usually in float. 
We equalized twice, no change in SG. I DID hear that likely this was the first 
time the batteries had ever been equalized, but no way to know for sure.
~ Spilled electrolyte from tipped battery replaced with water by a previous 
instructor's class? Can't see this, all the other cells would have lost 
electrolyte too;
~ A student accidentally discharged electrolyte into the bucket instead of back 
in the cell, then was replaced by distilled water when topping up? I can't see 
that either, the midnite hydrometer needs only a small sample.

So, I'm left with "likely we have a cell that is failing for some reason" and 
students secretly smug that the professor is also stumped.

Any ideas?


Dan Fink
Adjunct Professor, Ecotech Institute
IREC Certified Instructor™ for: 
~ PV Installation Professional
~ Small Wind Installer
Executive Director, Buckville Energy
NABCEP Accredited Continuing Education Providers™
970.672.4342 <tel:970.672.4342>
 

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