by Burgerman » 03 Jul 2024, 18:53
Heres how it works.
The battery is sat at x volts. Lower than the FIXED carefully choosen charge voltage. So when you connect a charger current flows to the battery because of the voltage difference.
How much flows in (in Amps) isnt up to the charger. Well it can be LIMITED by the chargers maximum, but it isnt "pumped in"... The current is determined by the difference between battery volts and charge volts.
The battery draws as much current as is needed to match the charge voltage. How high this current is depends on how low the battery voltage is, the battery internal resistance, how "meaty" the cables and connectors are, etc. Not the charger unless its small... At no point will it exceed the charging voltage. Which should be 28.2V for gel. 28.8 to 29.2V for AGM. And these voltages will be identical on a 5A charger, and a 50A charger. The difference being how long it takes to get to this Voltage point.
As the battery votage rises, the current in Amps naturally falls away. When its close to zero the battery is charged.
To achieve a FULL 100% charge takes around 10 hours with a very powerful charger. And double that with a weedy one. If your charger tells you its done any faster than this then it is wrong. The green "ready" light comes on far too soon on most chargers. And then after this it drops to a lower voltage called float. This will also finish the last 1% of the charge over the next 4 to 12 hours. Depending how early the charger told you it was ready.
This canot be speeded up. Does that last 1% matter as it takes many hours at a low current? Not for range, no. But the battery will die much faster if it only ever gets to 99%. Like less than half its normal cycle life.
The advantage of a powerful charger then is 2 fold:
1. it gets the BULK high amp stage done very fast. That leaves L O N G E R in time for the slow CV stage to complete and so you get closer to a 100% charge in the limited period we have overnight. So the battery lives longer!
2. It allows a boost to put a lot of power back in the middle of a day in a shorter time. So charge for 30 to 60 mins as you check email etc before going out at night. Or anytime you get chance. Batteries love to be full. Hate to be discharged. So that it lowers the average depth of discharge during daily use. Making the battery last 2 or 3x longer at least, before its replaced.