J
Joerg
Guest
Attention, this is one of those rare electronics-related questions
Will be rigging up a small power-failure backup system. Essentially a
12V LiFePO4 battery (with BMS in there), inverter, solar panels, MPPT
charger.
When reading up on stuff and talking to people I found something very
disconcerting. It seems that MPPT charge controllers can and often do
commit suicide when operated without a battery. It even says that in the
manuals a lot. The trigger event can be as simple as the BMS opening for
some reason and ... *PHUT* ... MPPT is gone. A friend had that happen,
twice.
They can also send out a substantial voltage spike or short their
MOSFETs during such events, the latter letting full solar panel voltage
onto the 12V power bus. Both of which can kill rather expensive gear
connected to the 12V bus.
Why is that? Are the engineers designing this stuff not very bright? I\'d
never release a design with such \"traits\".
Does anyone know lower-end MPPT charge controllers (20-40A range) that
are properly designed in this respect? Preferably ones that are also low
noise so they don\'t mess with measurements on the lab bench. The Genasun
brand is low noise but AFAICT they only come for very low solar panel
voltages.
Of course, one solution is to build a massive crowbar to blow a fuse and
protect the connected gear. The MPPT charger might possibly still die.
--
Regards, Joerg
http://www.analogconsultants.com/
Will be rigging up a small power-failure backup system. Essentially a
12V LiFePO4 battery (with BMS in there), inverter, solar panels, MPPT
charger.
When reading up on stuff and talking to people I found something very
disconcerting. It seems that MPPT charge controllers can and often do
commit suicide when operated without a battery. It even says that in the
manuals a lot. The trigger event can be as simple as the BMS opening for
some reason and ... *PHUT* ... MPPT is gone. A friend had that happen,
twice.
They can also send out a substantial voltage spike or short their
MOSFETs during such events, the latter letting full solar panel voltage
onto the 12V power bus. Both of which can kill rather expensive gear
connected to the 12V bus.
Why is that? Are the engineers designing this stuff not very bright? I\'d
never release a design with such \"traits\".
Does anyone know lower-end MPPT charge controllers (20-40A range) that
are properly designed in this respect? Preferably ones that are also low
noise so they don\'t mess with measurements on the lab bench. The Genasun
brand is low noise but AFAICT they only come for very low solar panel
voltages.
Of course, one solution is to build a massive crowbar to blow a fuse and
protect the connected gear. The MPPT charger might possibly still die.
--
Regards, Joerg
http://www.analogconsultants.com/