Battery Discharge Gauge

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Bob F.

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May 6, 2004
60
- - San Diego
I came across this and thought I'd share it. Its a inexpense way to monitor battery charge, similar to Link 10, except not as many features. Bob F.
 
Jun 4, 2004
629
Sailboat - 48N x 89W
Not a Charge Monitor

The ENM “PT27" is nothing at all like a link 10 Battery Monitor. What it is, is a digital clock, and a very inaccurate voltmeter. Voltage (alone) is a nearly useless indication of state-of-charge. It’s not worth the posted $70 price.
 
Jun 3, 2004
63
Macgregor 23 Bull Shoals Lake, Arkansas
Battery Expert

I worked extensively with a NiCd Battery expert, probably one of the top ten. He said that there are only two times you can tell the state of charge of a battery. That is when it is fully charged and when it is fully discharged. Everything else is at best an educated (or uneducated) guess.
 
Jun 4, 2004
629
Sailboat - 48N x 89W
State of Charge

Current state-of-charge technology has extended the "state-of-art" much beyond the realm of educated guesswork. There are several (expensive) strategies for accurately measuring (&/or calculating) state of charge. Your (NiCad) expert is NOT wrong - but he IS overstating his argument.
 
Feb 27, 2004
61
Hunter 23 Beaver Lake, Nebraska
Thanks Bob F. for thinking of us.

I think it was nice of Bob to open the up to discussion.
 
Jun 3, 2004
63
Macgregor 23 Bull Shoals Lake, Arkansas
Gord-I disagree

There are too many variables. The equipment we used was incredibly sophisticated, but we still got in trouble occasionally. The batteries I am talking about are what are referred to as the NASA standard NICD. They were generally 50AH or 20AH. They could cost up to a million dollars for a three battery set. Other similar problems exist for other chemistries. The variables which really screw everything up is the age of the battery which includes the cycles the battery has completed, the cycle depths, the temperature, the temperature of the environment and probably most important and the most unquanatifiable is the specific chemistry of the specific battery being used. In spite of mass production, there are differences between batteries. Also not an issue for the batteries we are talking about a NICD has special problems. There is the memory effect which means that you have a 50AH battery, but if it is only used to discharge 15AH repeatedly, it will suddenly run out of useable capacity at around 15AH,
 
Feb 26, 2004
23,318
Catalina 34 224 Maple Bay, BC, Canada
Monitors

It really doesn't matter much, because I'm not convinced that anybody who feels that an amp-meter (LINK 10, etc.) is necessary really has any clue as to what's happening with their batteries. That's because people who need gages can't do the math and energy budgets. I have a non-functioning fuel gage (6 YEARS) and have NEVER gotten close to running out of fuel. Guys WITH FUEL GAGES are spending too much time with Vessel Assist. 1/2 gallons per hour, how many hours = # gallons use, it's simple match. Same is true for battery banks. Energy budget says: fridge 30 AH per day Lights 10 autopilot 5 etc. Total load, say, 60 ah per day. Battery bank: 400 ah 80% of 400 is 320 available, to 50% 200, difference is 120. 60 ah per day to 120 ah available is 2 {freaking'} days. Who needs a gage? Do the math, please. Stu PS The $$$ you spend on a gage is better spent on another battery to enlarge your house bank. Why measure a small bank, when you can last longer and go further with a bigger bank? A Link 10 costs what, $100 by the time it's installed, even if you do your own work. So how about 2 Costco batteries to bring your feeble stock house bank from 150 amp hours up to 400. What a deal!!! PPS Before anyone starts questioning my fridge amp hours, we turn it off at night. It's dark it's cold, we're in Northern California, and we get away with it. Maybe not in Maryland, but that's OUR budget. As they say in the small print, yours may differ. Golly, do the math, YOURS. :)
 
Jun 4, 2004
629
Sailboat - 48N x 89W
State-of-Charge (SOC)

Of course, I should have said that current state of the art Battery Monitors are RELATIVELY accurate. In our application on boats, the accuracy probably exceeds our ability to use the information. I think STU put it pretty well into perspective, though - spend about $500 on a good battery monitor; or about half that on a couple of hundred amp/hours of additional battery capacity? I realize that NASA doesn’t have the luxury of adding the weight of additional batteries, and that they would need very accurate SOC information. I also realize that they spent millions of dollars developing a pen that would write in Zero-G - the Russians used a pencil. Notwithstanding, Voltage (OCV) alone is a pretty poor indicator of state-of-charge. An approximate voltage, such as the $70 device that opened this topic, is useless.
 
Jun 3, 2004
63
Macgregor 23 Bull Shoals Lake, Arkansas
SOC

I can agree with the "relatively accurate" point. Certainly you have to keep track of the amp hours somehow, but no method is completely accurate. The older the batteries and the higher the discharge rates or any thing else out of the ordinary, the more inaccurate the SOC becomes. It is easy to compute the amount of AH removed. What you don't know is the amount of AH remaining and even possibly how close the battery was to a full SOC to start with. The problem with using voltage for SOC is that it can not be done accurately real time, i.e. I am out in the lake and need to know whether my trolling motor is about to run out of power. If there is a load on the battery or it is being charged, then there is no OCV to use. The OCV can be estimated using battery impedance (if you happen to know it), but that is not very accurate. If you take the load off the battery or stop charging, then you must wait for an hour or so to let the OCV stabilize. The pencil is an interesting point. I have never worked for NASA, but have worked with them. We were not allowed to use pencils for anything that had to do with an official document for obvious reasons. Pencil entries can be changed. I have seen ink entries reviewed with a magnifying glass to see if the "official" entry had been changed after a problem. The other problem with pencils is the contamination they can cause. We were not allowed to take them into a clean room. I don't know whether this applies once they get out of the clean room and into space, but I would bet that they don't like pencils in space for the same reason.
 
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