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Papita
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How much power does a 140 AH battery consume (in watts) when it is charging?
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How much power does a 140 AH battery consume (in watts) when it is charging?
The battery is a 12 V lead acid battery. It is being charged by a UPS (750Papita wrote:
How much power does a 140 AH battery consume (in watts) when it is
charging?
How can you expect anyone to give a useful answer to such an
incomplete question?
--
You can't have a sense of humor, if you have no sense!
A watt describes only an instantaneous condition of power dissipation.How much power does a 140 AH battery consume (in watts) when it is charging?
On Fri, 17 Apr 2009 10:14:57 +0500, "Papita" <tori@nowhere.com> wrote:
How much power does a 140 AH battery consume (in watts) when it is charging?
A watt describes only an instantaneous condition of power dissipation.
You (or your battery) don't consume watts of energy, but joules of it
(watt-seconds, or watt-hours, or even calories).
You can measure approximate charging loss, in watts, by measuring the
surface area of the battery, measuring the temperature of the surface
in degC, then calculate
P = (Tm-Ta) x As / 1000 (=/- 10%)
P= power in watts
Tm= measured surface temperature (degreesC) - averaged over the entire
surface would be more accurate.
Ta= ambient temperature (degreesC)
As= surface area cm^2
Measuring Watt-seconds requires the integration of this value over a
continuously monitored period, as the losses will vary with rate of
charging and state of charge over the life of the cell, for any
chemistry.
Some battery chemistries are more exothermic on charge than others,
and all may exhibit abnormalities outside of regular recommended
charging conditions.
RL
Power is defined as the first derivative of energy w.r.t time...i.e"Michael A. Terrell" <mike.terr...@earthlink.net> wrote in messagenews:J4WdnaexjIW3l3XUnZ2dnUVZ_vudnZ2d@earthlink.com...
Papita wrote:
How much power does a 140 AH battery consume (in watts) when it is
charging?
How can you expect anyone to give a useful answer to such an
incomplete question?
--
You can't have a sense of humor, if you have no sense!
The battery is a 12 V lead acid battery. It is being charged by a UPS (750
Watts). The UPS is getting power from mains (220 V AC). The battery is half
discharged.
There's another way, likely easier. You can monitor watt-hours coming in, andYou can measure approximate charging loss, in watts, by measuring the
surface area of the battery, measuring the temperature of the surface
in degC, then calculate
Neat, but I think it would tell you more about your charger's efficiency thanhttp://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16882715001&nm_mc=OTC
-Froogle&cm_mmc=OTC-Froogle-_-Electronic+Gadgets-_-P3+International-_-827
15001
There's a European 240V version of it out there as well. Plug the UPS
you wish to measure into it with no load and look at the wattage drawn,
it will be higher during charging than it will once the battery is fully
charged.
Depends on the battery voltage, chemistry, and charge time largely.How much power does a 140 AH battery consume (in watts) when it is charging?
You still can't derive power without stating a charge time and even then, youPapita wrote:
How much power does a 140 AH battery consume (in watts) when it is
charging?
The battery is a 12 V lead acid battery. It is being charged by a UPS (750
Watts). The UPS is getting power from mains (220 V AC). The battery is half
discharged.
James Sweet <jamessweet1@trashmail.net> wrote in
news:gs97p3$htt$1@news.motzarella.org:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16882715001&nm_mc=OTC
-Froogle&cm_mmc=OTC-Froogle-_-Electronic+Gadgets-_-P3+International-_-827
15001
There's a European 240V version of it out there as well. Plug the UPS
you wish to measure into it with no load and look at the wattage drawn,
it will be higher during charging than it will once the battery is fully
charged.
Neat, but I think it would tell you more about your charger's efficiency than
your batteries losses.
An *ideal* 12V, 140AH battery will deliver 140 amps for 1 hour, or 1AHow much power does a 140 AH battery consume (in watts) when it is charging?
On Fri, 17 Apr 2009 10:14:57 +0500, "Papita" <tori@nowhere.com> put
finger to keyboard and composed:
How much power does a 140 AH battery consume (in watts) when it is
charging?
An *ideal* 12V, 140AH battery will deliver 140 amps for 1 hour, or 1A
for 140 hours, or 10A for 14 hours, at 12V, before it is completely
discharged.
The supplied energy would be ...
E = V x I x t
= 12 x 140 x 1 /1000 kWh
= 1.68 kWh
If you could fully charge such a battery in 1 hour, then you would
require an average power input of 1.68kW. In 10 hours, the power would
be 168W.
I was economical with my language. What I meant was, if a completely"Franc Zabkar" <fzabkar@iinternode.on.net> wrote in message
news:h78ku499foo2vusmp8o998jov8i3db7i8g@4ax.com...
On Fri, 17 Apr 2009 10:14:57 +0500, "Papita" <tori@nowhere.com> put
finger to keyboard and composed:
How much power does a 140 AH battery consume (in watts) when it is
charging?
An *ideal* 12V, 140AH battery will deliver 140 amps for 1 hour, or 1A
for 140 hours, or 10A for 14 hours, at 12V, before it is completely
discharged.
The supplied energy would be ...
E = V x I x t
= 12 x 140 x 1 /1000 kWh
= 1.68 kWh
If you could fully charge such a battery in 1 hour, then you would
require an average power input of 1.68kW. In 10 hours, the power would
be 168W.
Thanks. So if everything is ideal and your calculation is correct then the
UPS will draw power at an average rate of 168W or 168 Joules/sec right? What
do you mean by 'In 10 hours, the power would be 168W' ?
You really need to know what sort of charging current your batteryI just want a figure
in Watts to try to compare it with other electric appliances e.g 100W bulb
etc. Also I want to know if my 2 KV generator would manage to charge it
alongside running 3 ceiling fans (of about 150W each)
I don't think the OP mentioned anything about a UPS. Just wanted tolegg wrote:
On Fri, 17 Apr 2009 10:14:57 +0500, "Papita" <tori@nowhere.com> wrote:
How much power does a 140 AH battery consume (in watts) when it is charging?
A watt describes only an instantaneous condition of power dissipation.
You (or your battery) don't consume watts of energy, but joules of it
(watt-seconds, or watt-hours, or even calories).
You can measure approximate charging loss, in watts, by measuring the
surface area of the battery, measuring the temperature of the surface
in degC, then calculate
P = (Tm-Ta) x As / 1000 (=/- 10%)
P= power in watts
Tm= measured surface temperature (degreesC) - averaged over the entire
surface would be more accurate.
Ta= ambient temperature (degreesC)
As= surface area cm^2
Measuring Watt-seconds requires the integration of this value over a
continuously monitored period, as the losses will vary with rate of
charging and state of charge over the life of the cell, for any
chemistry.
Some battery chemistries are more exothermic on charge than others,
and all may exhibit abnormalities outside of regular recommended
charging conditions.
RL
It's easier to just take a real world measurement. These work
surprisingly well for how inexpensive they are
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16882715001&nm_mc=OTC-Froogle&cm_mmc=OTC-Froogle-_-Electronic+Gadgets-_-P3+International-_-82715001
There's a European 240V version of it out there as well. Plug the UPS
you wish to measure into it with no load and look at the wattage drawn,
it will be higher during charging than it will once the battery is fully
charged.
On Thu, 16 Apr 2009 23:32:31 -0700, James Sweet
jamessweet1@trashmail.net> wrote:
legg wrote:
On Fri, 17 Apr 2009 10:14:57 +0500, "Papita" <tori@nowhere.com> wrote:
How much power does a 140 AH battery consume (in watts) when it is charging?
A watt describes only an instantaneous condition of power dissipation.
You (or your battery) don't consume watts of energy, but joules of it
(watt-seconds, or watt-hours, or even calories).
You can measure approximate charging loss, in watts, by measuring the
surface area of the battery, measuring the temperature of the surface
in degC, then calculate
P = (Tm-Ta) x As / 1000 (=/- 10%)
P= power in watts
Tm= measured surface temperature (degreesC) - averaged over the entire
surface would be more accurate.
Ta= ambient temperature (degreesC)
As= surface area cm^2
Measuring Watt-seconds requires the integration of this value over a
continuously monitored period, as the losses will vary with rate of
charging and state of charge over the life of the cell, for any
chemistry.
Some battery chemistries are more exothermic on charge than others,
and all may exhibit abnormalities outside of regular recommended
charging conditions.
RL
It's easier to just take a real world measurement. These work
surprisingly well for how inexpensive they are
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16882715001&nm_mc=OTC-Froogle&cm_mmc=OTC-Froogle-_-Electronic+Gadgets-_-P3+International-_-82715001
There's a European 240V version of it out there as well. Plug the UPS
you wish to measure into it with no load and look at the wattage drawn,
it will be higher during charging than it will once the battery is fully
charged.
I don't think the OP mentioned anything about a UPS. Just wanted to
point out that a thermometer, ruler and timepiece can all be useful in
electronics, as can pencil and paper.
Unless the wattmeter can be stuck in the actual charging circuit, your
measurement is only going to be vaguely related to what you're trying
to measure.
I'd be interested to know how these useful little meters react to low
voltage DC......
RL
Your generator will definitely handle it, it's just a question of how fastI just want a figure
in Watts to try to compare it with other electric appliances e.g 100W bulb
etc. Also I want to know if my 2 KV generator would manage to charge it
alongside running 3 ceiling fans (of about 150W each)
And if all you want is a guide to what is drawn out of a mains connection,
get a Kill-A-Watt meter like James Sweet pointed out. Those do all your
monitoring and averaging for you because they're designed to watch long term
use of intermittent loads, like fridge compressors, and unsteady ones like
TV's and hi-fi's.
Don't I know it.. killed my SCI Pro One synth in 1985. A performance thatIn regards to UPS on a generator, be aware that some UPS's do not like
the output of some generators, and will refuse to switch out of battery
mode. Cheap generators tend to have really dirty nasty output.
NOT MUCHHow much power does a 140 AH battery consume (in watts) when it is charging?