> You only need diodes with some very leaky panels.
Ah. Thanks!
> From the size of your cells, I would suspect they are 200 to 400 AH, not
> 11AH. Can you measure them closer?
Now, to make sure I'm describing them properly, I have forty individual cells of that size, that, I'm told, then totals 440 AH, making each individual cell 11 AH. It is not impossible that I was told incorrectly, as nobody seems to have paper on these things, one thing, as I was saying, I'm trying to chase down.
> If they have as high of capacity as I think they do, you can pump 20 to
> 50 amps into each string and maybe more. Can you charge them at that
> high of a current and then float them for a while at 15 volts?
That's my problem: with the IOTA charger, I can't GET them to 15v (or 30 in 24v configuration). While I was using them in the fall, before my U series died, yes, I could give them a good charge still at 30V.
But yes, when the voltage is down around 11v, I can put 50 amps in... until the voltage starts to climb, then the charger loses it.
> A MPPT charge control would be helpfull to you if you could run a 24V
> array for a 12V battery or a 48V array with a 24V battery especially in
> hot weather since the voltage is a little higher than Lead Acid.
Ok, I see what you mean. Hopefully, though, soon I won't have that problem as when I get the windmill up, it's 40V DC and I can charge the batteries, back in a twenty cell 24V configuration, with the two enermaxers I have; that was the setup with the guy who last owned this system.
My problem is that I currently (pardon the recurring pun
can't get the juice in with a gas genny and the IOTA charger; it has a devil of a time putting just 14V into the batteries.
> By the way, I run a string of Alcad LC105P cells (105AH) on one of my
> systems.
Cool! With all the problems I've had with my system, and by god, there've been many, that has been my mantra: "When I finally have it together, the NiCads will have been worth it"
.