user 37446
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- Mar 24, 2017
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I've been wondering how peeps know when their Li-on house battery is "full" as you cannot use voltage as the sole determination like with lead acid. If you have a coulomb meter maybe but what if you don't?
Example: You have a 100 amp cheapo $300 "drop in" house battery. You spring for a 20 amp DC to DC charger and an mppt charge controller with programmable settings.
So what tells the dc to dc charger to not keep sending a charge?
Since charge controllers pretty much only work on "time" for their stages, how are you going to figure that?
Or am I overthinking things, as usual. Reading various online articles and watching YT videos hasn't helped me, but then I may be "beyond help" anyway.
Example: You have a 100 amp cheapo $300 "drop in" house battery. You spring for a 20 amp DC to DC charger and an mppt charge controller with programmable settings.
So what tells the dc to dc charger to not keep sending a charge?
Since charge controllers pretty much only work on "time" for their stages, how are you going to figure that?
Or am I overthinking things, as usual. Reading various online articles and watching YT videos hasn't helped me, but then I may be "beyond help" anyway.