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electrical:12v:battery_monitor [2024/03/06 22:44] frater_secessus [inexpensive shunts] |
electrical:12v:battery_monitor [2024/10/21 14:43] (current) frater_secessus [TL;DR] |
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| [[https:// | [[https:// | ||
| * Battery monitors start from a known State of Charge then count every Amp going into or out of the battery bank | * Battery monitors start from a known State of Charge then count every Amp going into or out of the battery bank | ||
| + | * the shunt can be internal to the battery (lithium batts with BMS comms) or external to the bank | ||
| + | * the current acceptance of the battery bank in Absorption can tell you how close to fully charged a lead battery is((applies to Li also but the numbers are much smaller and we are not chasing 100% necessarily)) | ||
| * these measurements can go astray (" | * these measurements can go astray (" | ||
| * drift will be more noticeable with lead chemistries than lithium | * drift will be more noticeable with lead chemistries than lithium | ||
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| ===== sizing ===== | ===== sizing ===== | ||
| - | The shunt should be sized to handle your highest expected demand comfortably. For example, a system designed for 80A of current would require | + | The shunt should be sized to handle your highest expected demand comfortably. For example, a system designed for 80A of current would work well with a 100A shunt. |
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| + | A shunt that is **too small** a shunt will fail if exposed to current that exceeds its rating. | ||
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| + | A shunt that is **too large** presents different problems. | ||
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| ===== how they work ===== | ===== how they work ===== | ||
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| + | * YT: [[https:// | ||
| ==== Bogart Trimetric ==== | ==== Bogart Trimetric ==== | ||