twistedtree
Guru
Thank You!
Of all the people here I have learned over time to trust and respect your knowledge of electrical systems.
Thanks. Very kind of you.
Thank You!
Of all the people here I have learned over time to trust and respect your knowledge of electrical systems.
You guys are assuming that you are actually charging beyond 80% which most folks on the hook with FLA batteries do not do if they understand FLA charging.
My argument is valid electrically. If you operatye your FLA bank in the approx 50-80% SOC range most will never be able to exceed the charge capabilities of a reasonable FLA bank using off the shelf charging equipment.
You guys are assuming that you are actually charging beyond 80% which most folks on the hook with FLA batteries do not do if they understand FLA charging.
My argument is valid electrically. If you operatye your FLA bank in the approx 50-80% SOC range most will never be able to exceed the charge capabilities of a reasonable FLA bank using off the shelf charging equipment.
BTW my crown 430 AH batteries recommend a maximum of 100A charge current. That means that two parallel strings are 200A. Few chargers have excess of that capability.
Remember that evey watt of energy used out of a battery bank needs to be replaced. If you are operating your bank to maximize your chargers capability when running on generator you are not going to avhieve better results than that, regardless of the technology of the batteries. Thus you are not saving generator run time.
Admittedly if you have the same size bank of LifeP04 batteries as FLA batteries you can run your generator longer to replace those watts used, and go longer between generator run times, but you will not shorten the total time you need to run the generator.
The problem with that is few people replace a 800AH FLA bank with a 800AH LiFeP04 bank. They tend to go smaller because of cost, etc...
Then consider this... On a FLA bank that is operated normally between 50 and 80% you have the capability to occasionally go all the way to zero or close to it without affecting the overall longevity of your bank. For example if you are planning to be underway and using your main engine alternator you might not run your generator at all, just discharge below 50% and catch up using your main engine while underway.
You Do Not have that luxury with Life P04 because you typically operate in the 20-100% range, meaning you have no reserve cushion to fall back on, since it is simply not there.
No one has mentioned that the your charger will need to be changed out. To one that can handle the new chemistry.
I thought about changing over, but the cost to me is still high. I am hoping in the next few years the cost will go down.
My point is that lithium is the answer for some boaters while for others FLA works just fine and is far more cost effective for that user profile. I, for one, do not angst over depleting my FLA bank down to 40 or 30 percent occasionally thus shortening their useful life a bit. Again, so what.
Here's another consideration in my particular situation for considering switching to LiFePO4s. My current house bank is located outside of the engine room in a compartment that stays at 50deg F. At that temperature, according to Trojan, my FLAs lose 20% of their capacity. My 1100 ah bank becomes 880ah. At a 50% DOD, I only have 264ahs before reaching 80% DOD. With a smaller LiFePO4 bank (I'm thinking 420 ah) I can move it to a compartment that stays about 60deg F and is also closer to my inverter/charger and buss bars.
Tator
Here's another consideration in my particular situation for considering switching to LiFePO4s. My current house bank is located outside of the engine room in a compartment that stays at 50deg F. At that temperature, according to Trojan, my FLAs lose 20% of their capacity. My 1100 ah bank becomes 880ah. At a 50% DOD, I only have 264ahs before reaching 80% DOD. With a smaller LiFePO4 bank (I'm thinking 420 ah) I can move it to a compartment that stays about 60deg F and is also closer to my inverter/charger and buss bars.
Tator
TT what did you spec in your new Nordhavn?
On a new to you boat fireflies are very appealing but for a new build would think Li is the way to go. What was your decision and why?tx.
That is the part of the equation that most seem to either not understand or ignore.
A four battery bank of FLA L16 batteries will depending on the brand be right at or a bit over 800 amp hours in capacity, and accept a charge current of 200 amps.
Remember this is charge current so add your boats loads to that and you will then know your charger requirements to maximize this.
Now, how many of us have charge capability exceeding this?
My opinion darn few indeed.
Myself I have TWO Victron multiplus units running in parallel for a total charge capability of 240 amps. This barely amounts to the charge maximum on my FLA battery bank, so going to LIFeP04 will not save me generator run time.
BUT... Internet mythology and great salesmanship is fueling spending charging system upgrades, and that is a good thing.
My argument is and has been that a properly designed charging system will minimize generator run time, not simply the choice in LifeP04 batteries over competing technologies.
Take the same properly designed charging system, and use FLA batteries and in most cases you will achieve the same results if the goal is to minimize generator run time.
Agreed if you only charge through bulk ~80%.
It’s small, but LFP is also 95+% efficient round trip, with LA in the 80-90% range. So a slight difference there.
They don’t care if you go down to 30 or 20 percent state of charge. You can’t hurt them. Deeper discharge does mean fewer cycles remaining in the batteries, but with more than 3500 cycles, I don’t care.
After being on the hook all night with my energy hungry boat, I now find that I am back at 100 percent after a day of motoring. This did not happen with AGM batteries.
Gordon
Firefly article I ran across recently. Does this hold true for LFP batteries also?
https://www.morganscloud.com/2020/1...-batteries-are-great-but-read-the-fine-print/
Kevin,
Charging times will be reduced on lithium because their charge acceptance rate is higher. That last 10 - 20 percent will go as quickly as the first 30 percent. Fire flys take a long time to get to 100 percent, and their charge acceptance rate is higher than that of standard AGM.
Gordon
Thank you for the comment, Tator. The 48V come from a DC-to-DC transformer, i also have a 24V Kabola heating system that is fed through a DCtoDC transformer.
The batteries are connected in parallel.. the thrusters pull 490amps (not amphrs) for the few seconds or so that they are working. So not much AHs in the big picture. But the bow thrusters alone need to pull 490amps to work properly for the short duration.