BigGuns wrote:
I sure wish I could type better. The morning voltage was 50.9, not 10.9. Sorry I screwed up again. This is on a 48 volt system, four Dekas in series.
12.7V * 4 = 50.8V is a fully charged bank ... ANY voltage over this will be charging the battery's, they don't just start accepting a charge at 57.6V. The only difference is how long it takes to recharge, the lower the voltage, the slower the recharger but the more efficient the charge is.
BigGuns wrote:
If I set the sell voltage to 52, the SCC stays in Bulk mode all day. Is this what you are suggesting is correct?
Chuck.
Yes, its above the full charge resting voltage ...
BigGuns wrote:
We made sure to really minimize our electric usage, and I watched the battery voltage just to see if I needed to start the generator to power my wife’s oxygen support. To my delight the SCC charger kicked in and maintained the batteries, as well as supplying all the Inverter power we needed.
Chuck.
So, you have the capacity to go a full night and then rely on the solar to start recharging the battery's
OR
BigGuns wrote:
I understand about not needing to charge the batteries every day, I’m just not sure how to accomplish that feat. I don’t want to rely on my having to manually start the charger if a grid failure discharges the batteries.
Enable the Xw-6048's charger, set the bulk to 56V ( XW-MPPT should be 57.6V ) and select 2-stage charging. Also set the recharger level to say 48V, which would only happen when utility power is lost and when power returns the XW-6048 charger will do a charge cycle before grid-sell gets re-enabled.
http://www.xantrex.com/web/id/1871/docserve.aspx ( page 3-12 )
So, without power failures batterys are always charged, most energy is being sold to the grid ( 52V is more than 50.8V ) but little excess is being wasted. If power does fail, XW-6048 will start a charge cycle, but if solar is available the XW-MPPT with its higher bulk / aborb setting will take over that charging cycle if conditions permit