Are you attempting to build a smart charger? I think that's been done,
and most of the ones I've seen work pretty well.
bp
<part15sbs{at}gmail{dot}com>
On 6/7/2023 10:04 AM, dmmoff...@gmail.com wrote:
So I was looking at a rectifier config and trying to imagine the worst
possible thing I could do.
With some creativity I could start an equalizing charge that will run
for 48 hours at 58.5 Volts. Normally it would stop when charge current
hits a configurable fraction of the C10 Ah rating of the battery, but
by intentionally misconfiguring the size of the battery and that
fraction of Ah I could ensure that the equalizing charge runs until
the maximum time limit…..which I can set as high as 48 hours.
I could also disable the battery current limit, disable the over temp
shutoff, and disable the temperature compensation.
If I’ve disabled the current limiting feature in the rectifier, what
determines the current that will go into the battery when I’m on a
constant voltage charge? The charger can do up to 100A, but would it
put 100A into the battery for the full 48 hours, or would some other
factor limit it?
The spec sheet for the batteries lists an internal resistance of 3
/milli/ohms. V=IR tells me they could take thousands of amps at
58.5V. Is there any other limit here besides resistance. If nothing
else stops this machine from dumping it’s full 100A into the batteries
for 48 hours I’m pretty sure I could start a fire or explosion with
this rectifier if I wanted to. I’m not trying to commit an act of
sabotage by the way, I’m just wondering if a creative idiot could do
something terrible.
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