Evening all, 

A quick note on DOD. 

Batteries / cells are often rated at voltages above and below 1.75VPC (1.7 - 
1.85 are "common"), so ratings should be verified with the supplier / model.  
However, as anyone that has ever run a discharge test knows, the time / 
available AH from 1.8 to 1.7VPC is not a lot and generally voltage drops 
quickly. 

The voltage at 50% DOD will be influenced by the discharge rate with faster 
discharge rates (6, 8, 10 hr) having lower voltages at various discharge rates 
than longer discharge rates (72 or 100 hr). 

Regards, 

Jamie 

>>> Allan Sindelar <al...@positiveenergysolar.com> 3/26/2011 5:50 PM >>>
Kent and list,
And I was half awake this morning and realized my error in yesterday's post to 
which you responded... I said "A battery is considered empty at 10.75V (12V), 
or 1.79 VPC."
No, it's at 10.5V, or 1.75 VPC, as you have correctly stated. Sorry.
Allan

On 3/26/2011 12:01 PM, Kent Osterberg wrote: 


 
Default Title Wrenches,

I noticed an error in my reply below when Allan's second comments arrived. 
Correction: the battery is considered 100% discharged (not 80%) at 10.5 volts 
(1.75 vpc) under the conditions of use.

Kent



Kent Osterberg wrote: 


 
Default Title William,

I'll try to add a little to Allan's and Ronald Parades' comments.  Nearly every 
battery manufacturer specifies a maximum 80% depth of discharge (DOD); that 
corresponds to about 10.5 volts for a nominal 12-volt battery. Notice how close 
that is to the default setting used by many inverter manufacturers for starting 
the generator right away. For deep-cycle batteries, a cycle life in the low 
hundreds should be expected for a battery that is routinely discharged to 80% 
DOD.

Designing for a lower DOD will result in longer battery life. I've got a table 
from Ronald that shows the L16RE battery life expectancy is about 7 years for a 
25% daily DOD. Since that is their warranty target, it seems like they should 
specify a 25% daily average DOD in the battery instructions.

If charging primarily with a generator, 50% DOD before starting the generator 
is good compromise (but the generator shouldn't have to start every day, every 
other day maybe). Fuel economy really falls off the chart while charging above 
90% SOC. So if you are starting a generator at 75% and charging to 100% it'll 
use a lot more fuel that using the generator to charge from 50% to 80% or 85%. 
Trouble is that routinely charging to only 85% SOC will lead to sulfation 
problems. That can shorten the battery life too.

Kent Osterberg
Blue Mountain Solar, Inc. 


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