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electrical:depth_of_discharge [2023/08/18 01:28] frater_secessus [soft and firm charging] |
electrical:depth_of_discharge [2023/08/18 01:36] (current) frater_secessus [effect of DoD on lead battery life] |
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| DoD is the inverse of //State of Charge (SoC)// | DoD is the inverse of //State of Charge (SoC)// | ||
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| - | DoD has a **significant impact on longevity of lead deep cycle batteries**.((and, | ||
| Note: This information is primarily relevant to lead-chemistry batteries. | Note: This information is primarily relevant to lead-chemistry batteries. | ||
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| So while we can say with confidence that a 100Ah Li battery charged at 20A to 14.0v will be ~100% SoC, the same battery charged to 14.0v at 80A might only be at 75% SoC. And it **could get damagingly overcharged** if charged to 14.0v very gently at something like 5A.((the BMS cannot detect this scenario)) | So while we can say with confidence that a 100Ah Li battery charged at 20A to 14.0v will be ~100% SoC, the same battery charged to 14.0v at 80A might only be at 75% SoC. And it **could get damagingly overcharged** if charged to 14.0v very gently at something like 5A.((the BMS cannot detect this scenario)) | ||
| - | The amp counter will probably help here during charging although even it can be thrown off. | + | The amp counter will probably help here during charging although even it can be thrown off; see the battery monitor article for more on this. |
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| ===== effect of DoD on lead battery life ===== | ===== effect of DoD on lead battery life ===== | ||
| - | How deeply one regularly discharges lead-chemistry batteries will have a **direct effect | + | DoD has a **significant impact |
| - | The **most common discharge limit for deep cycle batteries is 50% DoD**. | + | The **most common discharge limit for deep cycle batteries is 50% DoD**. |
| Based on the following data on the Trojan T-105: | Based on the following data on the Trojan T-105: | ||