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electrical:12v:voltage_sag [2022/03/16 17:38] frater_secessus [do nothing] |
electrical:12v:voltage_sag [2024/10/05 14:23] (current) frater_secessus [voltage sense wire] |
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| ==== shorten the circuit ==== | ==== shorten the circuit ==== | ||
| - | A shorter wiring run will have less sag than a longer run. For this reason charging sources are mounted **as close to the battery bank as possible**. | + | All other things being equal, a **shorter wiring run will have less sag** than a longer run. For this reason charging sources are mounted **as close to the battery bank as possible**. |
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| ==== adjust charging setpoints ==== | ==== adjust charging setpoints ==== | ||
| + | If your sag is consistent you could adjust your setpoints upwards. | ||
| + | Or if your battery manufacturer offers a range of charging voltages like 14.0v - 14.4v you could configure 14.4v and know it will be ≤14.4v in real conditions. | ||
| ==== voltage sense wire ==== | ==== voltage sense wire ==== | ||
| - | use a separate | + | A voltage sense wire is a separate |
| - | networked shunt | + | Since the circuit isn't carrying any real current there will be very little sag and even quite thin wires can be used to get an accurate voltage reading. |
| - | use a controller | + | Example: |
| + | Some sense " | ||
| - | ==== calibration ==== | ||
| + | ==== networked shunt ==== | ||
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| + | Some controllers use networked [[electrical: | ||
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| + | Examples: | ||
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| + | * [[https:// | ||
| + | * [[https:// | ||
| + | * [[https:// | ||
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| + | ==== calibration ==== | ||
| + | The controller may also have a **voltage calibration** setpoint. | ||
| - | have a voltage calibration setting - sag varies with current so the user might need to figure out average sag in their use case. | + | Unfortunately, |