Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#11
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wed, 25 Feb 2004 22:48:04 -0000, Dave Platt wrote:
First thing I'd do is check your battery-charging circuit. If you're trying to charge them from a 12-volt regulated source, then this could be the root of your problem... a "12-volt" gel cell won't accept a useful amount of charge at this voltage. You'll need around 13.8 volts to slow/float-charge the battery, and perhaps 14.3 - 14.4 volts (with an appropriate current limit) to fast-charge it. Read the label on the gel-cell. 14.4 volts will cook the battery in no time flat. I learned that the hard way several years ago. Good point. 14.4 is appropriate for most flooded-cell lead-acid batteries, but is hard on gel cells, and is definitely too much for AGM/glassmat/spiral-cell batteries. 13.8 seems to be generally safe, and some folks feel that float-charging should be done at 13.6 or below for certain types of batteries. My power panel uses two regulated power supplies (a 50 A unit and a 35 A unit) operating through an isolation diode block to float charge the Size 31 (100+ AH) marine deep-cycle gel-cell. The 50A supply is set to deliver 13.5 V to the battery bus by itself, and the 35A supply is set to deliver 13.3 V by itself - so I can tell by the digital voltmeter readout as well as the LED on-line indicators if the big supply goes off-line and the small supply has picked up the load. The steady-state load on the bus is 7A which goes up to 25A when all transmitters are firing. That's definitely in the "Don't drop the screwdriver, George!" category! In designing the panel it helped that both my wife and I are both electrical engineers trained in power distribution and that she spent a few years in large-scale UPS design. She did insist, however, that the installation be done to UL and USCG 12-V marine safety standards, not "hamshack haywire". Expensive but "right". *very* nice! The installation will run for about four hours in UPS mode after which various boxes drop off line when the voltage goes much below 11.8 V. My next investment is a small natural-gas-powered gen-set to supply the 120 VAC for the chargers and the computer installation when commercial power fails. I'd love to put the whole house on standby power, but who has a 50 KW gen-set or better yet fuel cell hanging around that needs a good home? ggg Pity they never did make cold-fusion generators work. -- Dave Platt AE6EO Hosting the Jade Warrior home page: http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior I do _not_ wish to receive unsolicited commercial email, and I will boycott any company which has the gall to send me such ads! |
#14
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Howard" wrote in message | Pity they never did make cold-fusion generators work. | They work just fine, that's just one of the things your friendly power | company and Public Utilities Comission won't tell you about 8-} Woooop, Woooop, Wooooooop ! (Relax Mildred, it's just the "Jerk" alarm going off...) |
#15
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Howard" wrote in message | Pity they never did make cold-fusion generators work. | They work just fine, that's just one of the things your friendly power | company and Public Utilities Comission won't tell you about 8-} Woooop, Woooop, Wooooooop ! (Relax Mildred, it's just the "Jerk" alarm going off...) |
Reply |
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Outbacker Fly Lead Length | Antenna | |||
Outbacker Fly Lead Length | Antenna | |||
Have You Been Harmed By Lead Solder? | Equipment | |||
AMBULANCE CHASER Have You Been Harmed By Lead Solder? | Equipment |