I just finished the upgrade to LiFePO4 on
Rumour. Here's the short-list:
- 2 x 200Ah Victron SmartLFP 12,8V batteries (can already hear @Christian Williams protesting my shenanigans
)
- Arco A225s alternator and corelated J10 serpentine belt conversion
- Arco Zeus alternator regulator
- an assortment of Victron components: Smart BatteryProtects, SmallBMS, etc
I went with Victron because I wanted a lack of surprises and the ability to tap into the logic of the battery's BMS. With Victron (and Epoch and a couple others), one can plug in an external BMS device which can intelligently signal to cut chargers or loads when the internal battery BMS says it's in trouble --
before the BMS disconnects the negative terminal. This allows direct charging of the Victron LiFePO4 batteries from the alternator. The BMS will signal to the Zeus to pull field current if there is an overvoltage, imbalance, or overtemperature condition in either battery. The old battery box has been repurposed for this charging system control, positive bus fusing, the regulator, and shunt measurements.
I have the alternator detuned to a max output of 160A. It will push ~250A cold and ~190A hot, so I might have some tuning to do in the future.
I wanted two batteries rather than one large one for redundancy. If one battery suffers a failure, I rely on the other. Real estate is an issue on the E32-3... I found a nesting location under the port side berth in the salon. I built a little shelf and installed a 1-2-BOTH-OFF switch with T-class fuses. Dead shorts on lithium batteries produce huge currents due to the miniscule internal resistance of the battery. The isolator switch can be used to de-energize DC for the entire boat from the new battery box or isolate a failed battery.
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