Very informative Phil thanks for posting.I am going to reply to this and compare the LFD90 battery with an RB100.
Datasheets are attached.
If you only discharge your batteries to 50% you should get 200 cycles (with 80% capacity remaining). The RB100 should give 10,000 cycles at 50% discharge (with 80% capacity remaining). So you will need to buy 50 LFD90s over time (50 x £95 = £4750). But let us say that we are going to discharge the lithium battery to 100% and get the full 100Ah on every cycle we should still achieve 6000 cycles meaning that the Lithium has more than the capacity of 2 LFD90 batteries (actually more than three if you use an inverter a lot like me). So if you use the full 100% DoD you will need to buy 60 (30 x 2) LFD90s over time (60 x £95 = £5700).
But that is not the main reason for buying lithium batteries.
We charge our batteries with limited energy resources like solar or from the dual charge circuit and lithium batteries store more of the input energy as usable energy. Lead acid batteries are like leaky buckets that can lose 20% of the input energy to poor charge efficiency.
Lithium batteries can take a higher charge current and charge faster, so the energy is being stored not slowed down with multi-stage charging.
If people use an inverter then lithium is king. When you discharge lead-acid batteries at a higher rate (say 50 amps) then you reduce the capacity. you will no longer get 45Ah form your 90Ah battery, you will get about 30Ah (50% DoD).
So to sum up:
They also have a built-in computer (BMS) that protects the battery from over voltage, under voltage, current overload and short circuit protection.
- They weigh less (about 33% of the equivalent lead-acid usable Ah)
- They are safer than lead acid (no acid or explosive gases) Lifepo4 batteries are very safe.
- They are cheaper over time (much higher cycle rate)
- They charge faster (they take a full charge current until almost completely charged)
- They charge more efficiently storing more of the available energy (lithium 99% lead-acid 80%-85%)
- You can use all their capacity so 1 RB100 is the equivalent of 2 100Ah lead acid batteries
- They do not lose stamina under high discharge currents (most 100Ah lead-acid batteries will lose 40% of there capacity under a 50 amp load)
I know these batteries are expensive, but for the off-grid motorhomer they really make sense.
I am sure they do have the charging protection, but you want to be able to charge them, so heating is a better option then preventing chargingI bought these 12v motorcycle hand grip warmers for less than £4 to put under my battery in case I need to warm it up for charging.
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/142674440723
Haven’t needed them yet and probably never will because my battery compartment is insulated and on the warm air heated circuit. But just in case the mh has stood idle in freezing weather I could if needed switch them on to warm the battery up. If you were a regular user in arctic conditions then Relion have just launched a new battery that takes the initial charging current and heats itself up with it before turning it over for charging. I believe the RB100 bms protects the cells from charging when the battery is too cold anyway.
They are drop-in replacements, the only thing you need to do is to make sure your onboard charger and solar charger are set to charge at 14.2 -14.6 volts for optimal charging.So Phil think you’ve mentioned these before to me what I’d like too know are they straight replacements if I pulled my two 90a vartas could I just plop these in as replacements without changing anything else
How do the batteries deal with the Float? do they self-disconnect when full?They are drop-in replacements, the only thing you need to do is to make sure your onboard charger and solar charger are set to charge at 14.2 -14.6 volts for optimal charging.
As far as I am aware the onboard controller deals with this, but as it is not mentioned in the data sheets I have phoned Relion in the USA and I am waiting for a callback.How do the batteries deal with the Float? do they self-disconnect when full?
Could you confirm the charge temperature range with them as well? I know it quotes -20 to 45 Charging, and -20 to 60 Discharging in the specs, however the charts for the Charging shows examples of 5C to 45c, whereas the Discharge one matches the spec sheet with examples from -20c through to 60c. -20c for charging is pretty unusual for Lithium and I am wondering if that -20c in the spec is a typo!As far as I am aware the onboard controller deals with this, but as it is not mentioned in the data sheets I have phoned Relion in the USA and I am waiting for a callback.
Just on the point of warming the battery, the RB100 has a charge temperature range of -20c to 45c