10
submitted 1 year ago by fratermus to c/houseless

I've noted before that when I stealth camp in cities my charging percentage from alternator increases from ~5% to ~10% of total production. The increase isn't needed (solar could cover it) but the alt gets a chance to play.

Since I am moving at least twice a day (3x with PF showers) I've had an opportunity to record a higher frequency of engine starts and LFP bank acceptance. The setup:

  • 180A alternator that typically runs at 14.2v
  • Battery Doctor VSR setup left over from my previous FLA bank
  • 150Ah 12v LFP bank
  • SoC and voltage measurements below taken from BMS before engine start
  • current measurements taken from BMS though it agrees with shunted battery monitor. (I can see the BMS via bluetooth from the driver's seat but I can't see the monitor)
  • solar contribution and loads ranged widely, leading to variance.

Over the last ~20 runs, the average state of charge was 72%, bank voltage 13.20v, charge acceptance 0.183C (27.39A)

    SoC Vbatt       C       A
    60	13.07	0.245	36.75
    72	13.15	0.130	19.50
    69	13.13	0.120	18.00
    27	12.95	0.270	40.50
    80	13.29	0.150	22.50
    80	13.27	0.240	36.00
    81	13.30	0.170	25.50
    77	13.22	0.165	24.75
    39	13.03	0.260	39.00
    95	13.30	0.115	17.25
    48	13.06	0.235	35.25
    86	13.56	0.120	18.00
    90	13.25	0.220	33.00
    90	13.26	0.165	24.75
    62	13.08	0.240	36.00
    92	13.27	0.084	12.60
    92	13.27	0.090	13.50
    58	13.07	0.235	35.25
    89	13.26	0.140	21.00
    84	13.26	0.215	32.25
    49	13.07	0.225	33.75

Given average charge acceptance of 27.39A, the obvious comparison here is to a 30A DC-DC like the Orion-TR. The DC-DC would have a much more stable charge rate, typically ~30A except late in the charging process when acceptance at Vabs tapers.

top 3 comments
sorted by: hot top controversial new old
[-] SHOW_ME_YOUR_ASSHOLE@lemm.ee 4 points 1 year ago

I typically only relocate every few days but when I do I'm usually driving for at least 3-4 hours. My 30 amp Orion plus my solar panels is usually enough to get my 272aH battery to full. I do wish I had gone with a larger DC-DC charger because I occasionally have to idle the engine to charge the battery when the weather is cloudy even if I'm not driving anywhere. A 60 amp charger would reduce the time I'd need to idle in order to get a decent charge.

One minor annoyance is that the Orion doesn't charge my lifepo4 to 100% on its own. I don't think the voltage knob goes high enough to hit the top voltage that my BMS considers 100%. It's probably only a few amp hours of capacity missing, but it bugs me to drive all night and end up with only 95% charge.

[-] fratermus 2 points 1 year ago

A 60 amp charger would reduce the time I’d need to idle in order to get a decent charge.

I've seen Orions paralleled for 60A. Is that an option?

[-] SHOW_ME_YOUR_ASSHOLE@lemm.ee 2 points 1 year ago

Yes, I would need to run a larger gauge wire but the connection point on the vehicle is capable of 60 amps. I just don't want to run more wires though because I'm lazy.

this post was submitted on 06 Oct 2023
10 points (100.0% liked)

Living in vans, cars, RVs, etc

339 readers
1 users here now

!houseless@lemmy.sdf.org

We're not homeless, we're houseless! By choice or by circumstance we are living in our vehicles. Don't worry about us -- it can be a very good life.

Anything that affects us as vehicle-dwellers is probably on topic.

external resources

fedi resources

rules of engagement


vandwellers vandwelling vanlife urbancarliving

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS