Tinbum wrote: ↑Fri Jan 26, 2024 1:19 pm
richbee wrote: ↑Fri Jan 26, 2024 11:17 am
My Sunsynk setup is definitely affected by temperature, but maybe not as much as I thought it might be.
The battery temperature readings haven't dropped below 5 degrees during the recent cold snap - they are in the loft so will get some heat rising up from the house.
I now charge them overnight between 2 & 5am on Flux. You can see them fully charge to start with, and then tail off once above 85ish%.
Strange sometimes that they don't reach the full 99%, sometimes 97 or 95, even though there is time left before 5am to keep charging.
The only common point seems to be this happens if the batteries were 'empty' at 20% so not discharging before charging started.
If they were at 25-30% or higher and still discharging, they will reach 99% every time (will also be interesting to see if they come back to reaching 100% once the weather warms up, or if they have lost their first 1%?
With my Pylontech they sit at 89% for ages and then rocket up to 100% in no time at all, as is common and the expected behaviour.
However when I set the max charge voltage at 52.5v instead of 53.2v the time taken to go from 90 % to 100% increases markedly.
SOC1 is 53.2v and SOC3 is 52.5v
Sure yours will come back to 100%
Well this has got me very 8nterested after todays experiences.
My Pylontechs charged by my Sunsynk inverter have been doing exactly this for a few weeks now - charging like a good one all day until they get to 89% then flatlining and not going higher even if a few more hours of good sunshine left in the day.
In fact this afternoon i phone Sunsynk Texhnical line and asked them why this is.
Guy on the phone (john) was no real help, logged into my system but kept saying its "just coincidence" that the 89% has been flatlining partway through a sunny day. I told him to look back through my SOC history and see just how many times the 89% issue happened, as its been 12 times in four weeks. Never at a different % always 89%. He agreed the 12 instances but kept saying its "just coincidence". Mine havent got to 100% as yet since this issue.
Ive even rewired the stack to use different batteries as master to check, and different numbers of batteries, but always the same % no matter what, so im thinking inverter fault. John says 'oh no, not an inverter fault'
Now im def8nately no expert, but he was pulling all sorts of excuses out.
Todays reason was because the "sun must have gone in at 3pm as you only was producing 30amps from your panels then" - quite why 30amps didnt lift the SOC% at all in over an hour he just couldnt explain. I was also on the roof at the time and it was as sunny all the way through till well past 4pm.
To be honest, it was a total waste of time talking to him, but he kept trying to convince me for half an hour!
He wants me to keep monitoring them, i want a replacement inverter, as this wasnt an issue previously.