I have BAE VRLA. 2V Cells 12V system.
I have not had to Eq.
They are set to Charge Bulk and Absorb at 2.366 V Per cell, so 28.4V for my system. For these batteries, new a bit over 3 years ago, I fitted a new Morningstar tri star regulator. It rarely goes into float even though they are 100% soc. It will only go into float when we are not home so seems to act on minimal current draw. Basically a max smoke set up.
I old system with FLA and different controllers would float by noon.
The specs for my batteries give 2.4V per cell as a gassing Voltage. When I had them new I had settings given to me by the supplier that were 2.4V or higher and I could hear them gassing so went by the manufactures data and dropped it back to the 2.366.
Your initial question is can you go higher in Voltage than specs. I would say no, you need to stay under gassing V.
I have not had to Eq.
They are set to Charge Bulk and Absorb at 2.366 V Per cell, so 28.4V for my system. For these batteries, new a bit over 3 years ago, I fitted a new Morningstar tri star regulator. It rarely goes into float even though they are 100% soc. It will only go into float when we are not home so seems to act on minimal current draw. Basically a max smoke set up.
I old system with FLA and different controllers would float by noon.
The specs for my batteries give 2.4V per cell as a gassing Voltage. When I had them new I had settings given to me by the supplier that were 2.4V or higher and I could hear them gassing so went by the manufactures data and dropped it back to the 2.366.
Your initial question is can you go higher in Voltage than specs. I would say no, you need to stay under gassing V.
Comment