LeishaShannon
Adventurer
Originally we had lead start batteries and used a simple bluesea 500A relay to connect/disconnect the lithium house battery from the truck when charging from alternator. We then replace the start battery with a lithium battery which made charging much easier as both batteries were the same chemistry. Recently we ditched the start battery all together as it was just dead weight - the house bank has no problem starting the truck and our electric bike batteries could be used if something went horribly wrong with the house bank.
Off Topic:
An often missed advantage of Lithium is the low peurket coefficient which makes a big difference in RV use where you have quite high loads at times. Another is the relatively stable voltage as the SoC decreases.
Heres a chart of the last 24 hours on our system showing how we've dropped from 70% to 30% SoC but the voltage has only dropped from 26.71v to 26.43v. The lifeline would have dropped a full 2 volts from so you get more usable power (W) than the equivalent lead battery.
Also neat is the low voltage sag under load - when the HWS cycled on at 22:15 the battery was supplying ~1800W @ 49% SoC yet it dropped less than a volt
Lithium is much easier than AGM to charge too. A simple single stage charger is all thats needed to CV charge to x volts (depends on manufacturer) then stop. There is no need for a long drawn out absorption charge to get the last 20% into the batteries so for RV charging from solar/alternator they're ideal as you're able to dump as much energy as you have available into them. On a sunny day with the engine running and plugged into the grid they happily gobble up 5kw+ which equates to a full charge from 0% SoC in ~1.5hours.
All that said they cost an arm and a leg upfront with no guarantee of longevity, no warranty, limited charging device support and anecdotal evidence from early adopters of ~30% capacity drop in the first 2-3 years (which may have been caused by overcharging) . But would we go back to using lead? no way
Off Topic:
An often missed advantage of Lithium is the low peurket coefficient which makes a big difference in RV use where you have quite high loads at times. Another is the relatively stable voltage as the SoC decreases.
Heres a chart of the last 24 hours on our system showing how we've dropped from 70% to 30% SoC but the voltage has only dropped from 26.71v to 26.43v. The lifeline would have dropped a full 2 volts from so you get more usable power (W) than the equivalent lead battery.
Also neat is the low voltage sag under load - when the HWS cycled on at 22:15 the battery was supplying ~1800W @ 49% SoC yet it dropped less than a volt
Lithium is much easier than AGM to charge too. A simple single stage charger is all thats needed to CV charge to x volts (depends on manufacturer) then stop. There is no need for a long drawn out absorption charge to get the last 20% into the batteries so for RV charging from solar/alternator they're ideal as you're able to dump as much energy as you have available into them. On a sunny day with the engine running and plugged into the grid they happily gobble up 5kw+ which equates to a full charge from 0% SoC in ~1.5hours.
All that said they cost an arm and a leg upfront with no guarantee of longevity, no warranty, limited charging device support and anecdotal evidence from early adopters of ~30% capacity drop in the first 2-3 years (which may have been caused by overcharging) . But would we go back to using lead? no way