Did you read the article I posted? Functionally all generators work the same, a coil of wire moves through a magnetic field. Sometimes the magnetic field is static, sometimes the wire is static. The external alternators on cars and boats have a static magnetic field and spin the wire coil. On motor cycles, it is the opposite, the wire coil (stator) is static and the magnetic field is rotated by putting magnets on the fly wheel or crankshaft. The difference is significant.That's not so. A stator is just one part of an alternator, and won't do anything without a rotor. Most street bikes, and certainly the ones I've owned and worked on, mostly Hondas from the mid-sixties through eighties, and my 2001 BMW R1100RT, have stators and rotors, hence, alternators, along with rectifiers (diodes) and voltage regulators. Period.
That is not so. It is the voltage spike that kills the diodes, because the current goes to zero. See my post #59.
('Though it was many years ago, I did take the one-year "power" course as an electrical engineering undergraduate, which dealt with motors, generators, alternators, etc.).
This is correct. BMS dump should really be called BMS disconnect since its just a switch that disconnects the actual battery from its terminal. If the current is being produced in a coil and the load is completely disconnected, the current instantly goes to zero. The basic inductor equation was given in the quote and the rapid current change is a large di/dt producing a large voltage spike.Know that it's a V = L di/dt issue; in simple, Ohm's Law terms, if the current suddenly goes to zero, as happens when the load is disconnected, to satisfy Ohm's Law the Voltage must go to infinity, theoretically. In the real world, just very high, exceed the Vmax of the diodes.
Just to reiterate, yes, that's an excellent and informative article. I'm saving it. Thanks for posting.Did you read the article I posted?
Any external multi-phase regulator can and will turn the alternator off. This happens every time that the regulator switches from absorption to float. On my last cruise, my battery topped out a couple of hours before we reached port and the regulator dropped to float. For those last two hours, the BMS app showed negative current as all loads were supplied by the battery and none coming from the alternator. The field voltage was 0-volts....
As far as wrecking alternators and controlling charge levels in LFP banks, for example, wanting to leave them at 80% SOC for storage, I don't believe the BMS we want has been introduced yet. For the alternator diode problem, you really need an output from the LFP BMS that will control the field current of the alternator, or perhaps just turn the regulator off, which would also drop the field current. Once the field current drops the alternator output current drops, and then disconnecting the load doesn't produce the voltage spike that can blow the diodes. Know that it's a V = L di/dt issue; in simple, Ohm's Law terms, if the current suddenly goes to zero, as happens when the load is disconnected, to satisfy Ohm's Law the Voltage must go to infinity, theoretically. In the real world, just very high, exceed the Vmax of the diodes. Then a BMS that would allow an all-LFP deployment and allow one to specify 80% or 100% SOC, and maybe even directly control a purpose-built regulator, or have an internal regulator for the alternator, is what one wants, I think.
You probably were not drawing power from the alternator because I suspect the battery voltage was higher than your float set voltage. For an FLA installation, the regulator is certainly not off when it's in float, it's just regulating to a lower voltage, and you can still damage diodes by a sudden disconnect.Any external multi-phase regulator can and will turn the alternator off. This happens every time that the regulator switches from absorption to float. On my last cruise, my battery topped out a couple of hours before we reached port and the regulator dropped to float. For those last two hours, the BMS app showed negative current as all loads were supplied by the battery and none coming from the alternator. The field voltage was 0-volts.
Yes, I know that. I was imagining what a more highly evolved BMS and regulator combination would enable.As for storing the battery at a lower state of charge that is not a thing that any BMS is designed to do because it cannot set voltage.
The regulator was not off, it is always on and monitoring the voltage. What I said was that because the set voltage was below the resting voltage of the battery, the regulator reduced the field voltage to the windings to 0-volts. Thes mean that there is no magnetic field, so the alternator is producing 0-current, and all loads are supplied by the battery. The same thing happens when my alternator case thermostat hits the high temperature set point and the alternator shuts off so that it can cool down. This would be true for FLA as well as my LFP batteries.You probably were not drawing power from the alternator because I suspect the battery voltage was higher than your float set voltage. For an FLA installation, the regulator is certainly not off when it's in float, it's just regulating to a lower voltage, and you can still damage diodes by a sudden disconnect.
Yes, I know that. I was imagining what a more highly evolved BMS and regulator combination would enable.
Yes, that's what I said.What I said was that because the set voltage was below the resting voltage of the battery
That's not necessarily so, because we are dealing with reactive components, notably the inductance of the alternator, so you can't analyze this is purely resistive terms. If you suddenly disconnect the load from a circuit with current flowing and an inductive circuit element, you will produce a voltage spike; even at low current. How big a spike, and will it be big enough to damage diodes, I don't know.FWIW, is the current output of the alternator is very low, there will be no boom with a disconnect because per Ohm's law, v-ir so if i = 0-current, and r is infinity, v = 0-volts.
The LFP's are game changing. We just got back from a weeklong cruise and spend 3-days on anchor and never needed to fire up the generator to charge the battery. On the last evening, I did run the generator for an hour because Sue wanted to use the microwave and my invertor is not big enough. I also wanted to make sure that the 2kw was big enough to handle the 60A charging I have. It worked fine for the chargers but could not handle the full 60A plus microwave. I reduced the charging to 30A and the microwave was fine.Yes, that's what I said.
That's not necessarily so, because we are dealing with reactive components, notably the inductance of the alternator, so you can't analyze this is purely resistive terms. If you suddenly disconnect the load from a circuit with current flowing and an inductive circuit element, you will produce a voltage spike; even at low current. How big a spike, and will it be big enough to damage diodes, I don't know.
Wow, you have a lot of LFP! I'm jealous. Not in my budget at this time, Someday, I hope.
I am not familiar with an ArgoFETOn the boat, they are isolated with an ArgoFET
Is that correct, or did you mean it closes when a charge voltage is present?they are isolated with a combiner relay that only opens when a charge voltage is present.
The ArgoFET is a FET based battery isolator. It works in the same way as the old diode based isolator in that it is a one-way valve for current. The difference is that it uses FET's instead of diodes so there is no voltage drop when charging. Here is a link to the Victron site. mine is the 200-2 but they also have 3-battery versions.I am not familiar with an ArgoFET
Is that correct, or did you mean it closes when a charge voltage is present?
Awesome, thanks.The ArgoFET is a FET based battery isolator. It works in the same way as the old diode based isolator in that it is a one-way valve for current. The difference is that it uses FET's instead of diodes so there is no voltage drop when charging. Here is a link to the Victron site. mine is the 200-2 but they also have 3-battery versions.
On my motorhome, the charging relay is controlled by the Spyder system which is a CAN system for all 12v loads in the coach. For charging, it checks the voltage of the batteries vs the alternator and when the alternator voltage is something like 0.7v higher than both batteries, it closes the normally open relay.
Hayden - how, or did you, test the ArgoFET setup for a disconnect? I understand the theory, but wonder if it has passed a practical test. If you did test, how did you do it without risking the alternator?The secret to no boom is some FLA that is connected into the charging circuit to give the current somewhere to go in case of a OVP cutoff. On the boat, they are isolated with an ArgoFET and on the motorhome, they are isolated with a combiner relay that only opens when a charge voltage is present.
I have not "tested" it but have disconnected the LFP from the charge sourse several times to top of the AGM. In the JK app, I turn off charging which is the same as an OVP event so that the LFP is not pulling the output voltage down due to the large capapcty of the LFP bank. I run it this way for about ten minutes to allow the AGM to get topped off after starting so that it is not at a partial charge state.Hayden - how, or did you, test the ArgoFET setup for a disconnect? I understand the theory, but wonder if it has passed a practical test. If you did test, how did you do it without risking the alternator?
Thanks,
Mike