highflyer2
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Another idea that might spark your interest.
Being lazy, I purchased a programmable voltmeter, which has proven to be a handy little gadget.
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This is basically a four digit voltmeter, but it has two independent 1 amp rated changeover relays. The exact pull in and drop out voltages can be set digitally in 10mV steps (on the 0-50v range). Four digit voltage readout would be 12.34v for example.
I am using one of these to keep a standby flooded lead acid engine starting battery fully charged.
It trickle charges the battery up to 14.20 volts and then disconnects the charger. Once the battery falls to 12.60 volts through self discharge, it reconnects the charger.
That is much more healthy for the battery than constant floating it at 13.8v.
A similar system might make a very nice automatic battery discharge tester that could connect and disconnect a load for capacity testing.
One relay could be programmed for discharge testing, the other relay for battery charging.
So you can use the same voltmeter for both functions without having to fiddle around reprogramming it every time, which is a bit of a chore.
You might want to look at one of these Turnigy power analysers.
It monitors volts, amps, watts, and records watt hours and amp hours with very fine resolution.
Perfect for monitoring and recording the results of a battery discharge test.
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Its just amazing what you can buy these days, and the low cost of many things is very discouraging towards developing small do it yourself projects.Amazing!
It is far cheaper than purchasing the raw components.
But by doing this it takes all the fun out of the hobby and there for makes it less interesting and pointless, well that my thoughts.Its just amazing what you can buy these days, and the low cost of many things is very discouraging towards developing small do it yourself projects.
Yeah auto are rated in CCA but they still have an AH rating and these are not designed for supplying current continuous like deep cycle. I understand that there are some batteries like lifepo4 etc these are designed for high discharge currents unlike AGM batteries which the Op is talking about. To discharge at 24 amps comes with a lot of heat to get rid off.There are all kinds of funny ways to rate batteries. Automotive batteries are sometimes rated in CCA (cold cranking amps) which amazingly is a thirty second discharge rating.
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There is no reason why a special purpose battery could not be rated for a one hour discharge. Lithium iron phosphate batteries LiFePo4 can be safely either charged or discharged at a one hour rate in electric vehicles, so its not unheard of.
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