To clarify some of what has been said.
Each Pylontech battery unit is 48v and contains 15 x Lithium Iron Phosphate cells in series. The U2000 series ones (there are now several variants) most of us have are 2.4kWh capacity each and cost circa £750. The newer U3000 series are 3.5kWh capacity and cost about £1075 each.
You can easily connect up to 8 units in parallel using their 25mm interconnect cables.
They work in a master / slave configuration, the first unit is the master with any other units being slaves and are connected together with ethernet patch cables. If any have a problem, they will shut down and give an audible and visual alarm. They can work together either stand alone like I use or the master unit is connected to a compatible inverter. I use in stand alone mode as I have several banks of different types of lithium batteries in parallel connected to my battery inverter and I fool my inverter to think they are lead acid but that requires several tweaks to the settings on my battery inverter to make this work.
So they can work with almost any battery inverter if using them this way but preferably using a compatible inverter if possible.
Each battery unit takes care of their own cells.
I have ran mine now for nearly 5 years without issues.
My Pylontechs
