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Balancer Performance & Problems

A project log for Solar Charger & Balancer for Lead Acid Stacks

Charger & Bidirectional Balancer for 48V Lead Acid Battery Stack

brian-cornellBrian Cornell 06/09/2022 at 21:200 Comments

During early testing I discovered an oversight with the differential amp design. Its balance bus reference, which also serves as the sense input to the controller, did not have a buffer. This resulted in 30mV+ offsets in balance bus measurements, so I hacked in a buffer using another OPA197. U4 provides a low impedance drive for the differential amp and keeps the sense signal noise free.

As mentioned in the previous post this Balancer may at best be described as an awkward design because it requires a good deal of setup for the specific stack and management from the controller during operation. I believe that most balancers for the type of battery stacks this design is intended for achieve balancing thru transformer action: each battery has some form of transformer based converter (e.g. forward) with a winding ratio equal to that of the stack. That is, the primary is connected to the full stack, say 4x12=48V, and the secondary to the battery. This design can run continuously, and the current delivered to each battery can be monitored, instead of voltage, to establish health.

So, here's my run-down of problems with this design.

Experience
The litmus test for anything is "Would you recommend it?" Sadly, I'd have to answer with a resounding no. That's not to say I'm sorry I built it: I have gained invaluable experience and I've added some useful stuff to my tool belt. And, in spite of its shortcomings, it has proven to be remarkably hardy. I've done some pretty stupid things with it, and aside from a blown fuse or two it hasn't skipped a beat.

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