John61CT said:OK, why go with 4-packs of prismatic cells rather than 12V drop-ins:
Drop-in 12V interior BMS is opaque, can't be adjusted or disabled, no communications to the outside, and they can suddenly isolate the battery with no warning.
Special steps must be taken to ensure this can't damage charge sources or sensitive load devices.
LFP is usually capable of accepting very high charge rates, no problem. To the point that 2-3 day's worth of energy can be pumped back into the bank in an hour or two if you have a high-current charge source available. But the cheap included BMS in drop-ins prevents that, restricts you to a slow charge (and discharge) rate.
If you follow their marketing BS for charging voltage (much too high) you'll be lucky to only get the rated #cycles' lifetime out of them.
If that, long after warranty expires. We don't have a large database on longevity reports as we do with the top prismatic manufacturers, and with those we know how to get House bank usage lifetimes well over double maybe 4-5x the rated 2000 cycles, so barring catastrophe well over a decade, maybe even two.
Putting more than 2-3 series strings (as each 12V unit is, 4S) in parallel can lead to shortened lifetimes from balancing issues.
Finally for a large bank they're rarely cheaper.
You have to understand, Drop-in is a lie if you want longevity, you need a good system, all the infrastructure designed for LFP from the ground up
not just BMS
over-current protection
LVD and HVD safety cut-offs
temperature protection
but also
100% PROGRAMMABLE charge sources
separate charge and loads bus
And the tools + knowledge required to try your best that investing 7-10x the price of a lead bank will pay off in many more years of service.
All of these last factors are true for any form of LFP bank.
Think about the fact that in the world of sailing yachts, 90+% of LFP installs are going into the racing boats, where lotsabuck$ are spent to minimize weight.
Even pretty wealthy liveaboard cruisers are hesitant about investing in a technology that has such a long ROI window, might be a lot less than a new set of sails, but still a lot of boat bucks to risk like that.
I suspect you hit an important nail on the head in speaking of the need for a "ground-up" system. I'm not an electrical expert by any means, but it's something I've seen again and again in new tech. There's a transition period when everything is wrongly-optimized to a soon-to-be-obsolete standard due to pure inertia.
I also suspect that as advanced a setup as you're describing is probably beyond my capabilities, as a beginner. In a few years, maybe. I've seen references to the prismatics here and there in my other research, but no one else explained them in such a way that I understood what the damn things even were. Thank you for your time, and for that especially. I accept that a drop-in system won't even be close to optimized, and that the ROI time is forever or beyond. But I think it's going to be all I ought to bite off for my first attempt. Maybe down the road, when I've learned more and the tech has matured, I can move up to a higher level.