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hardwiring equalization

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  • #16
    From the direction of the photo, I'm looking Northeast. About where the sun is currently rising. It shades a bit of the morning sun, but very quickly the sun is up and beaming on these panels. Yes, I'd like to do a much better solar panel install, this is what was here when I moved in. There is a bit of a tilt to the South Southeast.

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    • #17
      I was quite worried about wiring up my batteries like this because right at the beggining of my soalr adventures I short circuited a battery and gave myself quite a freight. Nothing happend luckily apart from the battery terminal melting a bit.

      the easiest way to describe it would be to wire 4 x 6v batteries in series first i.e positive to negative. DO that for your 4 indiviual strings. then connect them in parallel, so all of the + to + and all of the - to -.

      here is a vid of how I did it.
      https://youtu.be/RT9ONNdyRos

      I have my battery bank wired in this way but someone pointed out that its quite a dangerous way to wire your bank because if there is a short circuit, there are endless pathways for the current to go through and destroy your whole bank.

      The recommendation I got,(and have followed) is to run all of the parallel connections with thinner wire as they dont see much amperage anyway. I checked this and that was correct. I never saw more than 10 amps going through the parallel connections. So what I did was run the parallel connections with much thinner wire with auto fuses(10amp fuse) on each line. like that if there is ever a short circuit the fuses will blow.

      Here you can see exactly how i did it on my bank:
      https://youtu.be/Ll5OTwKcca8

      You also need a midpoint fuse on each individual string. As in, in the middle of each string. If you have 4 6v batteries in series then the fuse would go between battery 2 and 3.

      Hope that helps!

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      • #18
        Originally posted by Luke-es View Post
        I was quite worried about wiring up my batteries like this because right at the beggining of my soalr adventures I short circuited a battery and gave myself quite a freight. Nothing happend luckily apart from the battery terminal melting a bit.

        the easiest way to describe it would be to wire 4 x 6v batteries in series first i.e positive to negative. DO that for your 4 indiviual strings. then connect them in parallel, so all of the + to + and all of the - to -.

        here is a vid of how I did it.
        https://youtu.be/RT9ONNdyRos

        I have my battery bank wired in this way but someone pointed out that its quite a dangerous way to wire your bank because if there is a short circuit, there are endless pathways for the current to go through and destroy your whole bank.

        The recommendation I got,(and have followed) is to run all of the parallel connections with thinner wire as they dont see much amperage anyway. I checked this and that was correct. I never saw more than 10 amps going through the parallel connections. So what I did was run the parallel connections with much thinner wire with auto fuses(10amp fuse) on each line. like that if there is ever a short circuit the fuses will blow.

        Here you can see exactly how i did it on my bank:
        https://youtu.be/Ll5OTwKcca8

        You also need a midpoint fuse on each individual string. As in, in the middle of each string. If you have 4 6v batteries in series then the fuse would go between battery 2 and 3.

        Hope that helps!
        I'm sure there are improvements to the concept that can be made as you've shown.

        As long as the thinner wire isn't restricting anything, and it sounds like it isn't then it shouldn't make a difference. Fuse idea seems good.

        And of course we never plan on shorting anything!

        Maybe someone can 3d print some kind of plastic cap that covers the connection snugly somehow.
        Aaron Murakami





        You never change things by fighting the existing reality. To change something, build a new model that makes the existing model obsolete.” ― Richard Buckminster Fuller

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        • #19
          Am I correct in that there is no way to actually do this “hard-wire for equalization” and/or it is not necessary when we only have two 12 volt batteries wired in series for a 24 volt system? Thanks in advance for any response!

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          • #20
            Originally posted by Attilio View Post
            Am I correct in that there is no way to actually do this “hard-wire for equalization” and/or it is not necessary when we only have two 12 volt batteries wired in series for a 24 volt system? Thanks in advance for any response!
            The need for hardwire equaization is to have equal impedances between all the batteries,Yes if you have only two batteries 12v each and they are wired in series to get a 24v battery bank that is all that it needs.
            Rgds,
            Faraday88.
            'Wisdom comes from living out of the knowledge.'

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