Searching for info on Balmar’s 614 regulator to get an idea how people have been programming them I came across Dave’s post about the temp sensor. Quite interesting and I’m continually learning. I’m designing a system trying to avoid any chance of a disconnect. My equipment is older but programmable. Attached is a preliminary diagram Using the Beneteau switches recommended by Rod.
Observation
I finished charging both batteries with a bench top power supply. I started at 13.8 v and 25 amps and if I remember it brought me to about 80+% from 51%. I increased to 14.4 and dropped the amperage to 6 amp. The app said I was 100% but the amp hours were just short of 300 See attached. I increased it to 14.6v until I got an HOC disconnect but it got them to 300ah. Not something I want to happen on the boat. I am thinking it would be best to program my charging sources to bulk and absorb @ 13.8 and float at 13.2. I think this would keep them between 20-80% state of charge. I’m more concerned with the alternator. I try not to motor if I can but last season I had a few outings were I motored 8-10 hour runs. I read that it is possible to add a switch on the brown wire of the 614 to shut the alternator down. I think I’ll start out using alternator and Solar as the only charging sources and see how it does. I’ll occasionally plug in to shore power if needed to balance and recalibrate the shunt. Any of you using older technology I’d love to know how you programmed them. Any suggestions?
From your drawing, you have 600Ah of LFP? When you charged them to 13.8V @25A, that should have brought them very close to full. More than 80%, so perhaps the SOC meter needs calibrating, or needs time to learn.
Here is how voltage/current works in charging LFP. At higher C rates of charge, the voltage rises faster and hits the setpoint at a lower SOC than charging at low C rates. For example, we have a 1000Ah LFP bank. If it is charging at 0.25C (250A), and hits 13.8V (my charging setpoint), then I take it to 14.4V, it takes another 50Ah or so to reach 14.4V. That means it was ~95% SOC at 13.8V.
However, if I charge it at 0.04C (40A) to the same 13.8V, then take it to 14.4V, it only accepts another 5Ah or so, which means it was at 99%+ SOC at 13.8V.
Your 25A was ~0.06C, so when it reached 13.8V, it should have been ~98% SOC.
As for using "older technology" regulators, ours are set to charge to 13.7V, hold for 10min, then got to 13.2V float (basically shut down). Doing this shuts the alternators down when the battery is ~90% SOC, and I purposely did it this way because we have a lot of solar that can take up the last bit in a few minutes, and the alternators aren't our main charging source.
The regulators shut themselves down, so you don't need a disconnect for them. You can motor for days and they won't overcharge. One use for a disconnect (power interuption) is that it can be used to reset them to start charging again if you want.
Mark