current limiting device
current limiting device
(OP)
I have a 12V dc battery, which will be fully charged (and will be charged via an alternator), and a 12V dc battery which will be at any level of charge, and when the switch is thrown, they will be connected in parallel, so the fully charged one will charge the discharged one. They will be connected via (most likely) 8AWG wire, 30' or so. I need a device to go in series to limit the current to a max of 20A or so, to prevent the wire from melting and such.
Cheap is priority
I'm not sure what the name of such a component would be, or if they're easily obtainable, or if I could build such a device with a slew of resistors/capacitors.
I am a mechanical engineer, please go easy :)
Thanks
Cheap is priority
I'm not sure what the name of such a component would be, or if they're easily obtainable, or if I could build such a device with a slew of resistors/capacitors.
I am a mechanical engineer, please go easy :)
Thanks





RE: current limiting device
tail-light bulbs. Or a 250W 0.6 ohm resistor.
But if you let the auxiliary battery become
so discharged that AWG#8 cannot handle it,
it is discharged too far. Parallel your wires,
if #8 is all you have. Fuse at 30-40A.
<als>
RE: current limiting device
The problem with resistors is that the current is proportional to voltage difference. You will have your 20 A when the discharged battery is discharged. But, when it charges, its voltage will rise and the voltage difference go down. Which means that the charging current also goes down a lot.
I would use an automatically variable resistor aka 12 V head lamp. It will pass 4 or 5 A when there is a 12 V voltage difference. So you will need four in parallel to get 20 A.
The fine thing with this kind of lamps is that the resistance decreases as current goes down - so the decrease in charging current will not be so big. Actually, when voltage is around one or two volts, you will measure a very low resistance. So current will flow even when the battery is almost fully charged.
You will not have 20 A all the time, but much better than a resistor would give you. And there is a very easy-to-understand indicator lamp thrown in for good measure.
There are other ways of doing this. A chopper with transistors, iron cores and diodes comes to mind. But that is not easy and not cheap. Go with the lights!
Gunnar Englund
www.gke.org
RE: current limiting device
Gunnar Englund
www.gke.org
RE: current limiting device
Three souls- uno thought.
Couldn't resist. :)
RE: current limiting device
Gunnar Englund
www.gke.org
RE: current limiting device
Lightbulbs eh? just simple 12V bulbs? wired in parallel to each other, series inbetween the batteries?, like 4 or so say?
I'm guessing the lights will see the voltage difference, say 12V max, and will light up, (and create resistance to make the light?), and if it's bright, then it means it's charging quickly (high amps), and when it dims, the battery is close to full? As the battery becomes charged, the voltage difference (what the lights see), becomes less, and their resistance drops? (really? is this normal?)
Thanks a bunch
RE: current limiting device
Gunnar Englund
www.gke.org
RE: current limiting device
You could use 6V bulbs to actually see what's happening but if you ever drop your "too be charged" battery below 6V the 6V bulbs transition to fuse mode. If the case really is that you will never flatten the "too be charged" battery below 12V then you could reasonably use 6V bulbs and then keep spares for when you really do flatten the battery.
RE: current limiting device
Gunnar Englund
www.gke.org
RE: current limiting device
I won't need the bulbs for lighting purposes most likely, it probably won't be visible, but I may use tiny lights, then mount them in a visible location.
Can I use any light bulb meant for 12V? I imagine I should buy one (say a cars dome light or something), then measure it's resistance when hooked straight up to a 12V source, then design the amount of bulbs I need based on that eh? I know the basics of circuits (ohms law :) so I should be able to figure the rest out. I knew there was an easy solution, I was just drawing a blank.
Thanks for all the help.
RE: current limiting device
skigsgurra's selection of bulbs was to meet your requirements. If you want to use "other" bulbs you may need many more to meet your stated requirements.
Note his 55Watts? at 12V? That ohms-laws the resistance.
Head lights are sized in watts, your common tail/dome/courtesy/brake lights usually are not. So yes, you would need to do some testing.
RE: current limiting device
Functionally dead at 12V? huh, learn something new every day, I thought it'd still be ok at as low as 10V and such... Ok, i'll test out some courtesy lights I have around, check the resistance and such, and plan from there.
Thanks
RE: current limiting device
Gunnar Englund
www.gke.org
RE: current limiting device
an open terminal voltage of less than 2.1v/cell
(12.6v) means that the typical lead-acid battery
is at less than 75% capacity - what I would consider
the absolute lowest you want to go if you expect any
decent battery life. Temperature matters, also.
If this is a constant current drain application, use
a deep-discharge battery type.
<als>
RE: current limiting device
RE: current limiting device
skogs....
If you are *running* it lower than about 70% of its capacity then you need to put in *more* battery!! Or instead of 500 cycles you are going to have 200.. or 100... or 50 cycles before the battery goes dead in minutes. Now if this is a camper that you use 10 times a year then I guess 50 cycles before you have to replace the battery might be acceptable.
Here is a list of battery rules (some of us need reminding of)<not mentioning any names skogs>
********************************************************
1. Shallow discharges will result in a longer battery life.
2. 50% (or less) discharges are recommended.
3. 80% discharge is the maximum safe discharge.
4. Do not fully discharge flooded batteries (80% or more). This will damage (or kill) the battery.
5. Many experts recommend operating batteries only between the 50% to 85% of full charge range. A periodic equalization charge is a must when using this practice.
6. Do not leave batteries deeply discharged for any length of time.
7. lead acid batteries do not develop a memory and need not be fully discharged before recharging.
8. Batteries should be charged after each period of use.
9. Batteries that charge up but cannot support a load are most likely bad and should be tested. Refer to the Testing section for proper procedure.
*******************************************************
RE: current limiting device
Your rules here (very helpful, thanks!) is that mainly for lead acid, or do the first 4 go for deep-cycle/gel/spiral grid /Optima...
RE: current limiting device
RE: current limiting device
Brian is correct mostly.. But if that battery is damaged, a common thing, or stone dead you would smoke the wiring(bad) if not fused. Furthermore if you ever accidently start your vehicle and the engine battery is dead you will again smoke the wires if not fused. If you have the lamps in both cases they will light up brightly in these cases. Also if you have only wire and a fuse you have the problem of what do you do if the deep cell battery is what's called "flat" and you draw so much current that the fuse blows.. Then you stick another in and it blows... You are kind of trapped with no current limiter.
RE: current limiting device
Yea, I would put a 40A fuse on it for sure, and a switch/solenoid, so the batteries are only connected when the car is running (to keep from trying to draw from the "rear" battery if the front is dead), as well as a 40A fuse, I shouldn't burn out the wiring... if the fuse keeps popping then I know the battery is dead-dead, like "buy a new one" dead... or just completely drained, either way i'll have a 12V battery charger hooked up to it for the other times I need it charged, and I could use that....
ok, well I have my options now, thanks for all the help guys.
RE: current limiting device
RE: current limiting device
But still. Look what happens when you leave the room for a good night's sleep!
When I say that you can go below 12 V, I mean that you can go below 12 V. It won't kill your lead/acid battery to do so. Leaving it at low charge for an extended period will destroy it. But discharging and then charging again is OK.
In fact, the capacity is defined as the amperes x hours that can be taken from a battery before cell voltage falls down to 1.75 V, which is equivalent to 10.5 V battery voltage. And you can go further than that without really destroying the battery. We do it regularly when cranking out cars in cold winter mornings. Sometimes -30 centigrades and very often -20 C.
I agree that deep discharge is not good in the long run. It will eventually shorten life of the battery and should be avoided. But there is no sharp limit saying that you destroy the battery as soon as you go below 12 V. I say this so that the next thing to worry about will not be a "Battery Automatic Life Saver and Monitor Alarm" that monitors voltage precisly and sounds an alarm (in the middle of the night) when battery goes to 11.998 V
There are many papers on feeding and caring of batteries. One that I find quite good is http://www.ladac.no/pages/BatScool.htm
Gunnar Englund
www.gke.org
RE: current limiting device
RE: current limiting device
I couldn't resist.
i'm sorry...
Teach you to sleep!
RE: current limiting device
Gunnar Englund
www.gke.org
RE: current limiting device
panel meters. :)
<als>
RE: current limiting device
This is the exact situation found in motorhomes (RVs).
Typically there are two batteries - one to start the engine, and another one (or two in permanent parallel) to run the household inverters and lamps.
The RV industry has obviously solved this problem without using something as simple and cheap as a light bulb. I'll bet that they use a black box containing a big diode and a moderately big resistor.
(PS: The diode means that you don't need the switch.)
RE: current limiting device
older rigs used a relay to connect the auxiliary battery
after the motor was cranked. Later ones used a diode array
to the auxiliary, sometimes with an open nichrome coil in a
protective enclosure. I imagine that now the more expensive
RV's use some sort of DC-DC converter with 12v D.C. and
120v A.C. inputs. That's what I would do. :)
Camper-type (trailer) RV's use paralleled batteries and
a charger connected to shore power. Some have a trickle
function from one of the pins on the trailer connector.
I have seen a dual diode assembly on some that had a
generator.
<als>
RE: current limiting device
The other place to look is Marine/Boat stores because this is serious stuff on a boat... Ah...dear the battery is dead... the radio doesn't work... the wind is coming up.. there are rocks approaching.
http://www
RE: current limiting device
RE: current limiting device
I think the light bulb is your best alternative then. We could do a simple current regulator if you want to build a circuit with a series reg, resistors, etc. but bulbs are a great, cheap, little work idea. If you want a circuit, let me know, but u did say u were an ME.
Life is what happens while we're making other plans.
Wally