DiploStrat
Expedition Leader
The usual rule of thumb is that the charging rate for lead acid should be 20% of the battery capacity in Ampere Hours. So, with a 100Ah battery bank, you would want a charge rate of 20A. Lifeline, on the other hand, calls for up to 5x the battery size. Thus a 500A charger for a 100Ah battery. (I have had Lifeline batteries on both of my trucks.)
Charging is a balancing act. In order to charge a battery, the charge source has to be at a higher voltage than the battery. With a lead acid battery you want to provide as many amps as the battery will accept without boiling over. With an open lead acid, AKA flooded lead acid, you can top up the liquid. With a valve regulated battery, which includes AGM, you cannot. Thus there is a general tendency to specify a more conservative charge rate to avoid the loss of moisture. One reason that temperature compensation is important.
As soon as a lead acid battery starts to charge, it builds up a surface charge and this raises the internal voltage and has the effect of reducing the charge rate. So even with a big charger, the rate tends to drop to around 50A pretty quickly. Smaller battery to battery chargers, like the REDARC, compensate a bit by offering slightly hotter (i.e. higher voltages) in their various profiles. Sterling Power offers bigger chargers, more profiles, and, finally, the option of a completely custom profile. (At least on some units.)
A battery to battery charger can compensate for small voltage drops (circuit resistance) but you will notice that all of them call for fat wires and recommend erring on the size of larger wires.
Modern US pickups (with 200A to 500A alternators) are quite capable of 100A charge rates for longer than a 400Ah battery bank will accept it. The thing you have to check is the voltage, if your alternator peaks at 13.9v your amps won't matter that much.
The key thing is that the charge voltage reach the appropriate range, typically 14.4v for AGM and even higher for modern FLA. If your alternator cannot provide this, you will need it from somewhere else, typically solar or shore power.
And even with a perfect Battery to Battery charger (DC-DC) you may not ever drive long enough to compete the charge. Lifeline, and, I suspect others, warns that the greatest danger to their batteries is that they are not charged long enough. This leads to partial charge and sulfating which reduces battery life.
GEEKS read these:
Rolls battery manual: https://rollsbattery.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/Rolls_Battery_Manual.pdf
Lifeline battery tech manual: http://lifelinebatteries.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/6-0101-Rev-E-Lifeline-Technical-Manual.pdf
Charging is a balancing act. In order to charge a battery, the charge source has to be at a higher voltage than the battery. With a lead acid battery you want to provide as many amps as the battery will accept without boiling over. With an open lead acid, AKA flooded lead acid, you can top up the liquid. With a valve regulated battery, which includes AGM, you cannot. Thus there is a general tendency to specify a more conservative charge rate to avoid the loss of moisture. One reason that temperature compensation is important.
As soon as a lead acid battery starts to charge, it builds up a surface charge and this raises the internal voltage and has the effect of reducing the charge rate. So even with a big charger, the rate tends to drop to around 50A pretty quickly. Smaller battery to battery chargers, like the REDARC, compensate a bit by offering slightly hotter (i.e. higher voltages) in their various profiles. Sterling Power offers bigger chargers, more profiles, and, finally, the option of a completely custom profile. (At least on some units.)
A battery to battery charger can compensate for small voltage drops (circuit resistance) but you will notice that all of them call for fat wires and recommend erring on the size of larger wires.
Modern US pickups (with 200A to 500A alternators) are quite capable of 100A charge rates for longer than a 400Ah battery bank will accept it. The thing you have to check is the voltage, if your alternator peaks at 13.9v your amps won't matter that much.
The key thing is that the charge voltage reach the appropriate range, typically 14.4v for AGM and even higher for modern FLA. If your alternator cannot provide this, you will need it from somewhere else, typically solar or shore power.
And even with a perfect Battery to Battery charger (DC-DC) you may not ever drive long enough to compete the charge. Lifeline, and, I suspect others, warns that the greatest danger to their batteries is that they are not charged long enough. This leads to partial charge and sulfating which reduces battery life.
GEEKS read these:
Rolls battery manual: https://rollsbattery.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/Rolls_Battery_Manual.pdf
Lifeline battery tech manual: http://lifelinebatteries.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/6-0101-Rev-E-Lifeline-Technical-Manual.pdf
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