On 10/16/19 7:40 PM, John DeRosa OHM Ω
http://aviation.derosaweb.net wrote:
On Wednesday, October 16, 2019 at 7:51:15 PM UTC-5, kinsell wrote:
Unfortunately, not all LFP batteries have a BMS, and of those that do,
not all have low-voltage cutoff. Of all the misinformation that gets
spead about on LFP's, that right at the top of the list.
Given how easy it is to add a low-side power switch, I wonder why you
would build an automated, computer controlled tester that lacks this.
Adding it would make it useful for a wide range of batteries.
Kinsell - You have me thinking now.
While both my Stark and Bioenno batteries has a BMS that cuts off at 10Vdc, it wouldn't be too difficult to add an Arduino relay shield to the mix. It could remove the load for non-BMS lithium batteries and for SLA's.
These shields contain four 3A 24Vac relays and cost about $4.50 (cheap! see https://www.ebay.com/itm/323801575423). The neat thing about these shields is that they stack and make a nice tidy package. I would have a stack of;
LCD Display
-----------
Relay Shield
-----------
Arduino
Once the battery charge drops to the low volt trigger point, I would remove the load (turn off the relay) from the battery via coding. One relay rated at 3A should be ok but I might use two relays in parallel to be sure.
I just ordered a couple of the relay shields and will report back.
Good, that would be a nice addition to your project. You can also
Google "low-side power mosfets" for a different option that takes less
power to drive. Probably available in a stackable module also.