Solar series battery charging problem

In summary, the conversation discusses the use of large 12v solar panels wired in series to produce 24v and connected to a 24v charge controller and two 12v batteries wired in series for 24v. However, there is an issue with this configuration, as one battery tends to fail while the other remains partially charged. The cause of this is believed to be the charging in a cascading fashion, resulting in unequal charging of the batteries. The solution proposed is to connect the common between two solar panels on the roof and tie it to the common (+/-) post that tie the two batteries together, allowing both batteries to charge simultaneously. The conversation also touches on the importance of periodically doing an equalization charge to avoid battery failure
  • #36
As I stated in an earlier response, there is one system that is at 12v using a Powerjack 8/32K inverter too. That system never has these failures, only the 24v systems (there are three systems I set up, one for myself (24v), and two for friends nearby (one 24v and one 12v.)

Batteries are two different brands (the batteries here, however the batteries at the other 24v system are all the same brand and model) They are 8A8D with about 265Ah storage each. The batteries as I said, were from a large commercial solar installation and had been in use for about 9 months when they decided their banks were too small and they upgraded their entire array and I picked these batteries up from the company that swapped them out for that company. The brands are Deka and Interstate but both have the same exact specs are far as Amp Hour capacities, etc. Both types have failed, so it isn't just say the Interstate failing. One battery so far out of 8 on the other system, and 4 out of 24 here. My use on the system is far greater than the other system sees. I can be running up to 4 a/c's at times (small a/c's) and a microwave oven as well (for short periods of up to 5 minutes.) If you have been watching the temps here in Arizona recently you will realize we hit 121F the other day (where I live,) so power to run my a/c's is a matter of life or death, truly. A generator running 24 hrs a day at these temps won't last long. As a result, at times (like when it's hot like it is these days) I push the inverter to the limits pretty much. I have had it whining at me (beeping due to overload) more than once. But that's why I love this inverter, not as fancy as say an old Trace, but this thing takes a lot of abuse without failure. It has a huge torroid in it (it's a low frequency inverter.) Unlike the one you presented in your post that shows 2 of them, they later went to a larger single torroid for even more robustness.

OmCheeto said:
You might want to google the hazards of working with sulfuric acid first.

Dangerous? Wow didn't know that. Thanks for the heads up. Will buy some hazmat gear ;)
 
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  • #37
BernieM said:
Unlike the one you presented in your post that shows 2 of them, they later went to a larger single torroid for even more robustness.

You've not offered any information about your inverter besides its brand name and 8kw.
Google pointed me yesterday to this manual but it's a different brand so i ignored it.

. http://pdf.donrowe.com/wag8000_owners_guide.pdf

Got a link to yours ??
BernieM said:
It has a huge torroid in it (it's a low frequency inverter.)

Low frequency inverter ? Not pwm synthesized sinewave? That's curious, this day and age. Does it have input filter?

BernieM said:
They are 8A8D with about 265Ah storage each. The brands are Deka and Interstate
East penn's site is hard to navigate . I don't know what the LTP means.

upload_2017-6-24_13-22-39.png

http://www.mkbattery.com/images/8A8DLTP-DEKA.pdf

Here's the life vs discharge depth curve from lower right
upload_2017-6-24_13-26-33.png


at 50% discharge maybe 700 cycles ?
C/20 = 245 AH / 20 hours = 12.25 amps, X 10 sets = 122.5 amps, X 24 volts = 2940 watts at 20 hour rate.
So you're not overworking it a lot at 8kw.
At 5KW, 21 amps per battery pair, i get a little less than 6 hours to 50% discharge? Does that agree with your calcs?

background

http://www.eastpennmanufacturing.com/wp-content/uploads/Guide-to-VRLA-Batteries-1927.pdf
http://batteryuniversity.com/learn/article/absorbent_glass_mat_agm

Everybody stresses temperature and you have a lot of it out there. Try taping your temperature sensor right to a battery case ?

Still, the preponderance of failures you report in + side is curious.
Is negative side of 24V input tied to chassis as in that Wagan inverter? If so it'd be easy to 'scope.
A section of the interconnecting wire would useable as a primitive shunt to observe current waveform , DC coupled of course so you could use a DC ammeter to determine how many amps/division..

Good Luck

old jim
 
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  • #38
The PowerJack is not made by Wagan. Also what I can find on the internet today regarding the inverters I use are not up to date as to what they currently are. It seems that most of the posts, videos or reviews are several years old. Most inverters jack the voltage up pretty high and high frequency as well, then drop it back down to the output voltage. Typical. By using high frequency of course they can get away with small inductors cutting costs. The LF (low frequency) does not jack the frequency up and so a larger inductor is needed. But the advantages of that is that it is much more robust and harder to burn up as it heats up more slowly than a small inductor at high frequency. Also LF inverter is not susceptible to aircraft radio traffic interference. Where I live that's actually a concern as I am right in the flight path (several miles out) of the F35's flying into and out of Luke AFB in Phoenix.

Here is a link to eBay's ad that gives specs about the inverter. This is the inverter I have (mine is a few years older but specs about the same.) Please note that I have never found a useful manual other than a user manual that's included in the box. If you scroll down the page they give quite a few of the technical details and a description there that might be somewhat helpful.

http://www.ebay.com/itm/8000W-SP-LF...177748?hash=item4af2a064d4:g:U5oAAOSwDNdVihY5

I'm not sure what the LTP is either. My battery AmpHour rating is 265 not 250 as the one pictured (on the label of the battery.) But it's close so I don't think there is a lot of difference, or at least enough to be concerned about, so it's about right for my batteries.

I don't usually run loads of 5kw. Generally my loads typically run 1 to 2kw with intermittent 3 or 4kw loads for a few minutes at a time. The only loads I have that are large here other than a skill saw or table saw (which are used infrequently) is a microwave that pulls 1kw or so. But I can run an A/C (about 1kw) for 12 hours, and the battery bank will be discharged to about 50% (23.6v) by morning (with the load on it, of course the actual voltage recovers if I were to turn off the a/c which drops the voltage about .4v when on, so 24v.)

Since day 1, ALL battery failures have been the battery (of a pair) connect to the + of the system. Never the battery that's connected to the -. Now as I recall, heat moves in the direction of current flow from positive to negative. One of the principles of of a peltier diode. It is true it gets very hot here, and where the batteries are currently in this system, they see a fair amount of heat, (yet never as high as outside temps. To cure this heat problem I almost have finished an underground battery cellar 9 feet deep.) So if it is a heat issue, then the + terminal would be the hottest in addition to temperatures externally (which max out at around 98F.) Current would be related to post/wire heating as well, which then may be a cause for this strange phenomenon.

The other locations where the batteries are stored are similar to mine. In shaded locations where it does not get as hot as outside but not as cool as inside. The other 24v system is in a garage attached to the house, mine is on the front covered and enclosed, insulated porch.)
 
  • #39
Since we are about down to brain-storming for a solution, check the temperature of the connections to the battery posts during a high current situation. Gross problems would be detectable with your finger.
 
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  • #40
BernieM said:
Since day 1, ALL battery failures have been the battery (of a pair) connect to the + of the system. Never the battery that's connected to the -.
That's four failures ?

I still think you should 'scope the 24 volt voltage across and current through a couple of battery pairs.

Secondly - it's always something simple... How accurate is your voltmeter ? Have you checked it against another one? Got any friends at Palo Verde who'd do a calibration check it for you ?
If it reports low edit- oops,, too high you'll undercharge your batteries...
 
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  • #41
It looks like you have the wrong battery chemistry for your usage.

Also, is the charge controller in the same thermal environment as the batteries? That way it can adjust charge voltage to track the battery temperature.

BernieM said:
20 Flooded Cell batteries...
But the datasheet clearly states Lead Calcium plates, Valve Regulated Sealed, AGM (Absorbed Glass Mat.)

For an overview of battery types see: http://www.battcon.com/PapersFinal2009/ClarkPaper2009FINAL_12.pdf
Where it states that Lead Calcium is good for float usage as for an occassionally used UPS but has a relatively low cycle life. A Lead Selenium construction is suggested for long cycle life... or better yet a battery marked for photo-voltaic use if available. (pg.9)

And also indicates that there is something non-obvious about where a cell is located in the battery string. Unfortunately, no explanation is given.
Pg.4 states:
"In extreme cases ICV (Inter-Cell Voltage) variation can result in a gradual loss of capacity in low voltage cells. To achieve acceptable ICV variation, some manufacturers add platinum salts to the high voltage cells in a string to depolarize the negative plate."

From the Mfg of your batteries: http://www.eastpennmanufacturing.com/wp-content/uploads/Guide-to-VRLA-Batteries-1927.pdf

pg.3
"Immobilized gel or separator-absorbed electrolyte will not “float”
or “sink” within itself when a non-uniform concentration exists
so it cannot stratify. Therefore, no high-voltage equalizing charge
is necessary. Simply recharge at the recommended recharge
settings. This means longer life and consistent performance."

pg.4
"Any VRLA battery will dry out and fail prematurely if it
experiences excessive overcharging.
Note: It is too much voltage that initiates this problem, not too
much charge — a battery can be “over-charged” (damaged
by too much voltage) even though it is not fully 'charged.'"

p.s. (@jim hardy I think you'll also find the above articles informative.)
 
  • #42
  • #43
Tom.G said:
pg.4
"Any VRLA battery will dry out and fail prematurely if it
experiences excessive overcharging.
Note: It is too much voltage that initiates this problem, not too
much charge — a battery can be “over-charged” (damaged
by too much voltage) even though it is not fully 'charged.'"
That's interesting.. So if a local voltmeter is consistently reporting LOW it'd make one overcharge his batteries.

Feel those batteries when inverter is working hard.

Do gel batteries dissipate internal heat as well as flooded? Seems there'd be no convection in the electrolyte.
 
  • #44
Don't know why you guys don't just take me at my word. I know the difference between flooded cell and AGM. These are NOT AGM. I got photos of them but this editor won't allow me putting them in without uploading them to the internet somewhere.

I found the datasheet for them. Here it is:
http://www.dekabatteries.com/assets/base/0010.pdf
The battery numbers for the two case styles are 908DFT and 908D. Most of the batteries are Dekka. I have about 6 Interstates. They are just 8D-MHD.
Here is the datasheet for them (2nd page.)
http://www.interstatedealers.com/IBCatalog/common/commercial_spec.pdf
As you can see they are well matched.

I have 3 meters. One is built into the controller. One is built into the remote battery monitor I have attached, and I have a hand meter. All of them agree within a reasonable row of corn as to the voltage. There is no meter that's mysteriously reading low.

I will see if I can get the time to move the scope out there and check it for a/c ripple superimposed on the dc.

Regarding post temps: I just went out and checked, and though my optical thermometer was recently borrowed and not yet returned, I put the contact of the outside temperature probe right on the positive post. Air temp is 95F and post temp is 91F. It's about 1pm and the reason the post is lower than air temp is that overnight it all cooled down and takes a long time to heat up all that mass again the next day. But I have never found posts to be hot. By the way, the charge controllers advise connection of the temperature probe that comes with them to be attached to the + post. Which it is.

Load is about 2.5-3kw right now, as I am running 2 a/c's, a tv, a desktop pc with a 500w power supply in it, a chest freezer and a refrigerator and some lights. And that's about as much load as I typically run. Though there may be occasion where I run a heavy load like table saw, it's rare and usually isn't for very long.

No, it is not 4 failures. It is 4 failures in the last year with this array of batteries which have been in a year and a half, or thereabouts. Prior to that I had some smaller batteries which I had the same problem with, and had two of those go bad in about 1 year. And my friend's installation is now in place about 1 year and has had 1 failure. ALL OF THESE FAILED WHILE BEING THE BATTEY CONNECTED TO + IN THE PARALLEL BATTERY ARRAY ... and that's why I came here to see if there was something I was missing on what could cause battery failures like that. So far I have not found anything, even the a/c ripple to explain it. Why? Because that ripple would be spread out over 10 pairs of batteries. I think that would be a very noticeable thing.
 
  • #46
If you read the sentence just after that I made clear it was regarding whether the batteries were AGM or flooded cell. I have said that they are flooded cell several times in this thread.

They use them in commercial vehicles I guess. I don't know where I saw it, (possibly on a label) the term 'deep cycle.' Will look again. But even if these were not true deep cycle batteries, I still wouldn't understand the failure on just the array + connected battery.
One thing I read at one time or another in the past few years was that the batteries have 9 negative plates and 8 positive (per cell??) Not sure how that might affect this kind of a failure, or if it would have a role.

Regarding the earlier statement by Tom G. re: Failure of AGM's and high voltage even if battery is discharged. I had a good example of that on a small array with four 4D AGM's and a friend of mine got to playing with my controller settings while I was gone. 1/2 hour later when I came back and discovered it, he had fried all 4 AGM batteries. He set the controller to go 'on hi' instead of 'on low' which meant that when the array voltage got to the high voltage setting, to turn the charge controller on. He exposed the array to about 42 volts @ 100 amps (across 4 batteries, 2 ea in series!) He went on the internet trying to find a manual for the controller and let them cook, rather than disconnect them, and THEN look for a manual!

If random failure was the cause, what are the odds of 7 failures on a positive connected battery only? Well it would be like flipping a coin 7 times, always coming up with heads (or always tails) and the odds of that is 1:128. Fairly high odds, but actually reasonably possible. So there is a remote chance it is just a statistical fluke which I can't ignore. 2 or 3 more failures would push it out of the range of acceptable odds however I would think. Or perhaps the odds are weighted a bit by something like heat beginning at the positive terminal and heading toward the negative. Would be nice to see an expert on battery physics render some sort of speculation on this.
 
  • #47
BernieM said:
But even if these were not true deep cycle batteries, I still wouldn't understand the failure on just the array + connected battery.

You seem to have a knack for misunderstandings.

Deep discharge batteries AKA marine batteries, are critical to your application. They have thicker plates than so called starting batteries. They are meant for a smaller number of cycles, but deeper discharge and slower recovery. They typically cost more than starting batteries.
For maximum life, they should remain over 70% charged all the time. Their most common cause of failure is undercharging leading to sulphation. But you rejected sulphation because of you profound misunderstandings about basic electricity.

If you ignored deep discharge and used truck starting batteries, bad outcomes are expected. Compare it to putting diesel fuel in a gasoline engine.

From what I read in this thread, I put no credence in your idea about the +terminal being factual or relevant. You brushed aside advice to not mix batteries of different brands or ages. You have no records of the brands or ages connected to the + terminal and how they were paired.

You ignored my advice to ask the manufacturer for help and instead proposed cutting the failed batteries open yourself.

At ay ay ay ay.
 
  • #48
BernieM said:
One thing I read at one time or another in the past few years was that the batteries have 9 negative plates and 8 positive (per cell??) Not sure how that might affect this kind of a failure, or if it would have a role.
Physical position in a battery string will affect both cooling airflow and radiative cooling. Middle ones have the tough spot. We haven't seen a picture...

Here's the only esoteric brainstorm i can dream up for electrical position in the string to cause causing unequal heating. It's why i suggested a look at ripple.
It requires that ripple be high enough frequency for the area of those outside negative plates to make enough stray capacitance with nearby grounded structures that a few amps can flow through it.

Easy to rule out - 'scope both terminals of both batteries to ground. Look for ripple in the kilohz range at various inverter loads. Non sinewave load (like modern appliances) can affect ripple current on the DC side. .

If you can scope voltage drop along a few feet of wire, or make yourself a shunt, you can look directly at current. #10 is one milliohm per foot.

Direct current HAS TO flow through all the cells of both batteries.. HF ripple doesn't.
One cell of a battery: (Did i get all seventeen plates?)
ripplecurrent1.jpg

i said it was esoteric...

Test of 'heat following electron flow' hypothesis:
In failed car batteries-
is it always the cell adjacent positive post that fails?Good Luck,old jim
 
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  • #49
Anorlunda

Regarding the myths around mixing battery types and ages, most of what people say regarding the maximum number of strings or the ages of batteries in a string, capacities, etc., are mostly not true or conditionally true.

Apparently you believe some of those myths. Here is a paper that should address at least the ones you have expressed here in this thread:

http://battcon.com/PapersFinal2002/McDowallPaper2002.pdfAgain, at some point, when I got these batteries, I seem to recall that I saw or was told by someone that they were in fact deep cycle. I will have to clean all the labels off now and see if there are some that are deep cycle. Regardless, even starting batteries can be used, I just have to be careful not to cycle them as deep, and of course they won't have the same life span a deep cycle will. They have plenty of capacity for what I am doing for now. When they die I will replace them with better batteries more suited to the purpose.

JIM, My time in a day for this is very limited unfortunately, but I did set up the scope out by the batteries, but haven't had a chance yet to do everything you asked. I see only a 60 hz waveform, approx. 2v p-p. Plates would have to be pretty large for 60hz to be the issue wouldn't it? Nothing else. It's super clean up to 1 MHZ. I am using a Hitachi V1150 scope with input probes rated up to 100mhz. Scope is good to 150mhz. So it's overkill for khz. Again, nothing in the khz range at all. zero. zip. nada.

I am familiar with the problems with solid state devices and the power factor problems they cause. This inverter actually displays PF (power factor) on it's display, and the occasions I have checked and noticed the PF, it has been in the .9x range. However, I do have a line conditioner between the inverter and most of the house (except for the lines that feed the a/c's,) so it should eliminate most problems coming from my devices attached to the inverter. The a/c's are not on the conditioned line due to max amperage limits of the conditioner. The conditioner is a Tripplite.
 
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  • #50
BernieM said:
I see only a 60 hz waveform, approx. 2v p-p. Plates would have to be pretty large for 60hz to be the issue wouldn't it? Nothing else.
Good. Looks like that one's nearly ruled out. Thanks !

60 hz not 120 ? Curious. Sine or spikes ? Narrow spikes have high frequency content. But i expected them at frequency of a pwm synthesizer, ten khz or so.

So, maybe that thing is a step wave with only low frequency switching(as i think you said earlier) .

Troubleshooter's last stand: When nothing will show itself bad you have to make everything prove itself good.
one by one.

2 volts p-p is about 0.7 rms,
Seems curious the DMM didn't pick that up.
It's roughly 3% of your nominal 24 volts.

Ripple usually comes from the battery charger but yours has to be coming from the load, obviously.

Given that typical recommended ripple is ½% of nominal voltage and yours is 3%, 6X that

In the spirit of troubleshooter's last stand,
it's something to look into and make sure you're okay.
And resolve that difference between meter and 'scope.

When all those little mysteries are understood you're getting to know your system.
I lived thirty years with a power plant control system. Believe me, Mother Nature loved to humble me but i learned well from her regular floggings.
Pride is the enemy of learning.
One of those lessons was battery ripple from inverter loads. I had over 75 volts p-p on a 130 volt battery. So i might be oversensitive to the subject.

anyhow, to get back on topic

Here's a snippet from a sort of relevant article on the phenomenon
of course it's speaking to charger ripple not load induced ripple
upload_2017-6-28_16-28-12.png

article is at http://www.cdtechno.com/pdf/ref/41_2131_0212.pdf

another article that's long on pictures and short on words is here
https://www.victronenergy.com/live/_media/ve.bus:4._ripple_in_a_ac_battery_system.pdf
Between the two i think it's comprehensible

I sent East Penn an inquiry asking about ripple current rating of their 8D's, got no answer. Used their "contact us" button on the page. Maybe if you call up their sales guys and explain you have an array of twenty big ones that are dropping like flies* maybe it'll get their attention.
Given your high ambient temperature coincides with your airconditioning load time of day, you don't need any extra heat in those batteries.

Good Luck

old jim

* mild exaggeration is sometimes expedient
 
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  • #51
I have been working with solar in one form or another for over 40+ years. A lot of that high temperature steam power generation using concentrators, so that doesn't apply to this of course. But I moved into a shack (literally) about 3 years ago, where this is no power (and nowhere near here to get it if I did want grid power.) I started out here with about 400 watts in 40 watt solar panels, and 4 deep cycle RV type batteries (group 27.) Later I increased that to 1KW+ and barely survived a summer (using a generator a significant portion of every day during the heat of the day. Went through 3 of them!)

The system I have now isn't very pretty as it has had to be installed on a budget and in a hurry at times (getting up at the break of day and trying to get panels installed, wiring done, supports built, etc., before the sun made it impossible to work.) Of course all of it needs to be redone actually, because it was done in stages and done cheaply or whatever, and once up, hard to justify tearing it all down and redoing it all.

But it does work and most of the time works very well. Other than this battery issue from time to time, I am never without power, or too low on power to do what I want or need to do.

The voltage on the system when I checked the a/c output and read 2 volts a/c was 28.8v.

Didn't I mention that this inverter is low frequency? They use high frequency in inverters so that they can use smaller inductors. That makes them cheap. This one uses a huge torroid, so they don't need to jack up the frequency. They can work at the output line frequency. However, the ACTUAL frequency that this inverter works with, I do not know for sure. It is possible it is 120Hz. I will check again on the frequency, but I am pretty sure it was 60hz. Regarding the waveform, guess in my editing of the last post, I accidentally deleted the part where I said sine wave. It is a sine wave. A very clean, well shaped sine wave.

There is one thing that just thought of. One of the indications I get just prior to a failure in a battery, is that my inverter will start whining about being overvoltaged. It's overvoltage point is 30.5v. Even in cases where I set the max. charge voltage to be say 27.2 volts, even this low, when a battery is in the throes of dying, the inverter sounds off and I have to blow off some power fast from the array (run microwave a minute usually) or the inverter will fully shut down after 1 minute in this state.

The no load voltage of my panels is 21.8v (42.6v in series.)

When this happened, I had it figured that when the batteries are fully charged, with nowhere for power to be stored, that the voltage would rise faster (near instantaneous) than the PWM charge controller I was using would poll the voltage and be able to turn off power from the array, and this was the cause. If this is the problem or related to it, now I guess the question would be: is the inverter seeing higher than 30.5v caused by the failing battery, or are intermittent short peaks of voltages higher than 30.5v causing the battery to fail? Every time I have ever checked battery voltage with a meter however, unless I am equalizing the batteries, I never see a voltage more than the charge controller is set at. But then the meter does not respond instantly either. Perhaps I should look for it on the scope or get the old analog meter out! I actually figured that it might even be an idiosyncrasy of the inverter iteslf (haven't ruled this out either.)

Is there a way I can post a picture directly up here without having to post it somewhere else on the internet first? If so I can post some pictures.
 
  • #52
BernieM said:
They can work at the output line frequency. However, the ACTUAL frequency that this inverter works with, I do not know for sure. It is possible it is 120Hz.

It probably uses an H bridge to switch that big toroid. (Yes you did say it was low frequency - just that's hard to believe this day&age)
The H bridge switches at twice line frequency, once each half cycle to provide AC to primary. So it takes gulps of current at 120 hz , every time it reverses polarity and that's why i expected 120 hz not 60. That's sort of minor though , significance is it's line frequency ripple not high frequency chopper ripple.

BernieM said:
Is there a way I can post a picture directly up here without having to post it somewhere else on the internet first? If so I can post some pictures.
no "Upload" button? Image icon and Photobucket(it's free) works pretty well just you have to log in once a month or your pictures won't link anymore.

DC meters usually average over period of at least a line cycle. SO when set to DC they hide any AC that's present.

If ripple gets really bad your inverter might sense instantaneous overvoltage at a ripple peak? - i don't know. With so little info about it , who knows what those computers are doing ?
Need a readout of the AC that's present on your battery bus to see if this is related to high ripple voltage.
Try a capacitor (about a microfarad) in series with your DMM meter's test lead. Some analog meters half wave rectify so won't work. An ancient Simpson 260 with "Output " jack would be great.

Got a really HUGE electrolytic, like tens of thousands of microfarads ? Hook it across your inverter DC terminals and see if ripple goes down. I used one microfarad per milliamp on my 130 volt inverters you'll need more at only 24 volts. Could be the ones inside your inverter are losing capacity . That you see sine wave ripple suggests there is filtering just not enough of it.Yesterday i stumbled across a CDE article on selecting aluminum caps for this application, taming ripple. Will look for it again later.

Good Luck

old jim
 
  • #53
more than anybody wants to know about aluminum electrolytic capacitors

http://www.cde.com/resources/catalogs/AEappGUIDE.pdf

http://www.cde.com/resources/technical-papers/selectinvcap.pdf

http://www.cde.com/capacitors/aluminum-electrolytic/screw-terminal
i like the CCE 550 series but they're expensive
36D from chemicon is cheaper
Look at ripple current ratings of both in about 100,000 uf size

http://www.cde.com/resources/catalogs/550.pdf
http://www.mouser.com/ds/2/420/1687836876505b6669848e0-1100623.pdf

if you find out you need them.

Might look inside your inverter and see what input filtering they included, for a starting point..
 
  • #54
Biggest caps I have here are 60μfd @ 400v. Motor 'run' caps. But I can build one, just have to do some calculations on charge/area and make one from sheet aluminum that I have and plastic sheets to separate the layers. Saw a nice on in a laser setup at a university once. Simple, cheap and easy to build. Will have to dig up the formula to calculate out the square area of the aluminum sheet needed though.

FYI the email for powerjack is powerjack.albee@gmail.com
I have contacted him for scematics for the inverter, or schematic or specifications of at least the input filtering of the inverter. Will let you know if I get anything useful in response.

As I recall, when I opened up the inverter to blow it out of dust (very dusty here so I have to clean it regularly) it seems that I recall some hefty caps toward the rear of the unit where the battery connections come in. Problem is these days in my old age, I am finding out that memory isn't what it used to be.

One additional note here: I did check all the labels and none of them have any indication of being 'deep cycle' batteries on them marked anywhere. But it does bring up a point, what is a deep cycle battery really? Basically it's a battery that uses one of a few different possible lead alloys that make a battery last longer, with thicker plates. But in the terms of application, which is a deep cycle battery? A very robust commercial battery that has a 7 year warranty on it? Or a really cheap RV style battery with a 1 year warranty (like a type 27)? And I know that a lot of people believe that a marine battery is deep cycle battery, but technically it's not a true deep cycle battery either. It will list cold cranking amps, and generally deep cycles do not list cranking amps, just discharge rates at different loads. So it's kind of fuzzy gray area if you get what I mean. The batteries I have are essentially like a marine battery that is kind of a middle ground between a true deep cycle and a starting battery.
 
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  • #55
I found the reference to the deep cycle application of the Deka 908D batteries. It is considered 'dual purpose' meaning a cranking battery and a deep cycle battery. So it's the equivalent of a marine type battery in that respect. Here are a couple links. The second link shows it to be a 200ah @ 20 amp drain rate battery. This would only apply to a deep cycle application.

http://www.islandwaterworld.com/bro...y-8d-deep-cycle-908d-1730-mca-12v/4,7152.html
http://islandwaterworld.net/iww-files/pdf-description/LeadAcidBatteries.pdf
 
  • #56
  • #57
OK I noticed yesterday that there are two pairs of batteries exhibiting an odd difference. Here is a picture of one, the other isn't quite as bad as this yet. Both batteries are dusty, and neither has been cleaned. The one on the right which is coincidentally connected to the positive lead that connects in parallel with the rest of the array, is dampish. There has not been large amounts of acid or water coming out of the battery, because there is nothing dripping down the side, it's only on the plane of the top. I disconnected the batteries from each other and measured the voltage. They are both fully charged. The voltages are exactly the same. However, I think this is an early stage prior to failure in the manner that I have been talking about. That left uncorrected (whatever the problem is) that in the near future this battery will fail.

I checked the water level on it and it is not significantly different, if any really. So not much acid or water has come out of the battery. I am betting it is water vapor that has vented out across the battery while equalizing.

I have been doing a lot of research lately, and I have found some references to differences in charge rate of batteries in series, caused by internal temperatures. The positive connected battery may be heating up just a bit more than the second one, due to the effect of heat flowing from positive to negative as mentioned in the peltier effect. So heat generated by current will start at the positive and migrate toward the negative post. This small difference in temperature when temps are in the 90F temperature range, makes a large enough difference between the two batteries that while charging one will charge a little less than the other, amplifying any small difference to begin with. Over time the difference is cumulative, and eventually gets into a condition possibly of runaway. The a/c ripple may be another factor involved as to why one battery is heating possibly more than the other. However since I haven't seen any high frequency, I'm not totally sold on that yet. Will be checking into that further in the coming days.

Here is a post that describes the same issue I have experienced:
http://www.continuouswave.com/ubb/Forum6/HTML/003774.html
http://www.continuouswave.com/ubb/Forum6/HTML/003774.html
So, I think the bottom line is that there is nothing perfect, so the cells all have minor differences in impedance. This minor difference becomes amplified with time as the battery is cycled. At one point it becomes large enough to become a problem and cause the failure, and that heat is the major factor, whatever it's source.

18467b_be31ab3e9f324d7c97561a4268d953f4~mv2_d_2592_1936_s_2.jpg
 
  • #58
Well now you're sounding like an old troubleshooter.

Conduction across the top of a battery , through acid slime between its terminals, is a load on that battery just as surely as a would be light bulb. It'd steal charge from that battery and not its series partner. One would expect though to see bubbling if it got as high as an amp ?

Try your dmm on current scale, one test lead to a post and other into that dusty stuff . Wave it around to see if there's conductive spots. That's ruling out long shots, part of troubleshooter's last stand.

BernieM said:
However since I haven't seen any high frequency, I'm not totally sold on that yet. Will be checking into that further in the coming days.
we never resolved why your 'scope reports different than your DMM. Some DMM's won't read small AC in presence of substantial DC , that's why i suggest try a small capacitor in series with test lead.

Keep after it...
 
  • #59
BernieM said:
But I can build one,
(Big Capacitor)
I would be interested to know how well you manage to do that. I guess if volume is not a problem, you could hope to do what the manufacturers manage to do in reasonable sized packages. It's quite a problem to roll two foil strips and two dielectric films with many tens of turns and to get them even and undamaged. Why not just buy Capacitors, anyway? The film and the foil are pretty expensive to get hold of, in any case.
jim hardy said:
Conduction across the top of a battery , through acid slime between its terminals, is a load on that battery
I visited a Post Office Telephone Exchange in the late 60's and the batteries in the battery room were all sparkling clean! The terminals had clean grease on them too.
 
  • #60
jim hardy said:
Well now you're sounding like an old troubleshooter.

Conduction across the top of a battery , through acid slime between its terminals, is a load on that battery just as surely as a would be light bulb. It'd steal charge from that battery and not its series partner. One would expect though to see bubbling if it got as high as an amp ?

Try your dmm on current scale, one test lead to a post and other into that dusty stuff . Wave it around to see if there's conductive spots. That's ruling out long shots, part of troubleshooter's last stand.we never resolved why your 'scope reports different than your DMM. Some DMM's won't read small AC in presence of substantial DC , that's why i suggest try a small capacitor in series with test lead.

Keep after it...

No current flow either to negative or positive post in the wet dust.
Checked DMM again. Still the same result. I'm betting the current is too small for the meter to detect the frequency. When I check a/c current, it shows zero.
So it can be seen on the scope but not a meter. I also tried my clamp on ammeter but it showed no a/c as well.
I'll disconnect the + lead and put the meter in line to check a/c amps and see if it reads that way. That's in my mind the best way to check it anyhow. It will show current flow regeardless of freq if there's a/c on the line, as long as it's significant enough. Though I don't know what the frequency response will be on the meter in the a/c current mode, but I bet it's higher than 3000hz. And the current can be tested into the μa with the meter I have.

sophiecentaur said:
(Big Capacitor)
I would be interested to know how well you manage to do that. I guess if volume is not a problem, you could hope to do what the manufacturers manage to do in reasonable sized packages. It's quite a problem to roll two foil strips and two dielectric films with many tens of turns and to get them even and undamaged. Why not just buy Capacitors, anyway? The film and the foil are pretty expensive to get hold of, in any case.

I visited a Post Office Telephone Exchange in the late 60's and the batteries in the battery room were all sparkling clean! The terminals had clean grease on them too.

A flat capacitor is easy to make. Just make two bar clamps made of copper or aluminum and layers of aluminum foil or sheet between the two clamps, alternating which clamp they are clamped by, each sheet coming just short of touching the contact/clamp on the opposite side. Place a sheet of thin insulating material between each conductive layer. For more capacitance add more layers. Attach wires to the two clamps. Instant non-polarized cap. Pretty simple really.

That was a Telephone Exchange. This is a shack in the desert with batteries on a screen enclosed porch. Lots of dust. I don't use grease I use a battery spray that is conductive and inhibits corrosion. If you have OCD and dusty batteries bother you, you are welcome to come here and clean these daily! I hope you can handle 110F+ temps though!
 
  • #61
BernieM said:
Though I don't know what the frequency response will be on the meter in the a/c current mode, but I bet it's higher than 3000hz.

Scope reported 60 hz ? That's probably all you need.

BernieM said:
And the current can be tested into the μa with the meter I have.

If it's in series it'll have to pass the DC too. Most DMM's have a 2 amp fuse for the low ranges, better ones have a 10 amp fuse for that range.
So - Be careful you don't blow the fuse by asking it to pass ten amps or more of charging current..
Only external indication of blown fuse is it always reads zero on current scales.

Again - Good Luck , keep on eliminating stuff...

old jim
 
  • #62
After a lot of study of the problem, I have come to a conclusion (wrong or right is yet to remain to be seen.) Let me posit it here, now.

No batteries are perfect, and individual cells have a small variation between them in total capacity. Electrons flow from the + terminal of a battery to the - terminal. Heat generated by current flow in the battery is seen first at the + terminal of the battery. Also it should be noted that most failures in a battery are positive plate failures, where negative plate failures are very rare. This is a quote of an article that addresses this: "
  • VLA (Vented Lead Acid)
    In VLA batteries, positive grid corrosion is the normal sign of impending failure. As the grid corrodes, the effective cross section of the conduction path narrows — and the internal cell resistance increases. At the same time, the grid structure swells and deforms, causing it to lose contact with the paste (active material). Because the resistance between paste and grid increases, internal cell resistance increases. If you ignore the increased resistance and fail to remove the battery from service in a timely manner, the positive grids will lose their mechanical strength and start to break apart. "
Here is a link to that article: http://www.ecmweb.com/content/why-batteries-fail-prematurely

Here is a list of the types of failures and how common they are for different battery types:
http://www.aandncaravanservices.co.uk/resources/Battery failure chart.jpg?timestamp=1489447048898

Elevated temperatures require temperature compensation, reducing the current flow as temperature increases in the battery. Even within a battery there is a small variation in temperature from the + end to the - end of the battery. (I am of course talking here about lead acid flooded cell.) This small variation will not create much of a difference in the life of the battery or charging it, if the battery is by itself (stand alone.) But in series and parallel configurations, this temperature difference becomes more important. I will now attempt to explain why:

In a series configuration, a small difference in temperature at the + end of the battery will cause the first battery to overcharge a bit, while the second battery does not overcharge, as the average voltage is what the charging device will see (average voltage of (battery 1 + battery 2.) ) At the same time, one of the cells in the second battery will be weaker than the rest of the cells (this is true of the first as well but since the first gets overcharged it does not become sulfated)

Because the second battery is getting a bit less charging, all of the cells in it will get a bit sulfated, with it's weakest cell becoming the most sulfated within it. Overall the entire battery has now lost a little bit of capacity, with one cell even weaker than the rest. With repeated discharge and recharging, this difference is amplified, and as it becomes weaker, the first battery becomes more and more overcharged with each charging cycle.

Ultimately it depends on just how large that difference becomes, whether or not it will reach it's expected normal life or not, failing prematurely. So basically as the 2nd battery becomes more sulfated, the first becomes more overcharged, and as it overcharges, it becomes hotter, adding further to the problem, which will eventually lead to a positive plate failure in the first battery, the most common type of plate failure, and the second battery in series becomes possibly ruined by sulfation.

In a parallel configuration, this becomes even more problematic, as in a normal parallel configuration with identical batteries, current flow through each circuit is equal. However when one battery becomes hotter and overcharged, the internal resistance drops lower than the rest of the battery circuits, allowing far more current to pass through it than the rest. This even further accelerates the degradation of the weak battery string. And since my array is 10 banks of 2 batteries in series, this would rapidly accelerate this mode of failure in a battery in my banks.

Excessive heating, or unequal heating of the batteries in the strings, is basically the culprit. Caused by a number of factors, including environmental heat and current flow into and out of the battery strings.

With a large number of batteries such as I have, one would also be concerned that one battery suddenly get shorted out and all the other batteries then discharging through it! This is one of the reasons I decided to build an underground concrete cellar for the batteries. Battery explosion containment. It also helps to maintain a lower constant temperature on the batteries being over 8 feet deep where soil temperatures are low even in the summer. I should be able to keep the batteries in the 70F - 80F range which is ideal for them.

A friend of mine suggested a water bath to set all the batteries into and use night sky cooling to cool the water. But I think the black body radiator would have to be pretty big. Will have to investigate that further, later.
 
  • #63
BernieM said:
Excessive heating, or unequal heating of the batteries in the strings, is basically the culprit.
I lean that direction too. Are positive batteries set on a shelf above the negative ones?

Water bath seems overkill i'd think a few small electric fans to encourage air circulation might be just as good.

Peak charging from your panels comes same time of day as peak heat. Some estimate of battery internal temperature where the plates are might be enlightening.
Rise above ambient we don't know. An old fashioned glass thermometer stuck down in top of a cell would tell you that. It could sit right on the top of the plates.

upload_2017-7-6_9-19-29.png

Take two of these el cheapos, remove the element from one and put it in middle cell of middle battery ? Other one nearby for ambient ?


A thermistor dipped in that insulating plastic for tool handles stuck right down in the middle cell's electrolyte might give your charge controller a more accurate battery temperature .

Keep up the good work !

ps thanks for sharing in that other guy's DIY solar thread .

old jim
 
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Likes BernieM
  • #64
jim hardy said:
I lean that direction too. Are positive batteries set on a shelf above the negative ones?

Water bath seems overkill i'd think a few small electric fans to encourage air circulation might be just as good.

Peak charging from your panels comes same time of day as peak heat. Some estimate of battery internal temperature where the plates are might be enlightening.
Rise above ambient we don't know. An old fashioned glass thermometer stuck down in top of a cell would tell you that. It could sit right on the top of the plates.
...
A thermistor dipped in that insulating plastic for tool handles stuck right down in the middle cell's electrolyte might give your charge controller a more accurate battery temperature .

Keep up the good work !

ps thanks for sharing in that other guy's DIY solar thread .

old jim

No, the pairs of batteries sit on the same level, with their posts ends next to each other. They should be approximately equal in temperature.

Air circulation where they are would just be the same hot air they see now, around 95F in the heat of the day. In the bunker (when it's finished) it would work because ground temperature there is around 75F in summer. I actually plan to set them on the floor there, not stacked at all. I have enough space for that (planned it that way.) That way each battery is sitting on the ground as a heat sink. A small fan will be helpful as well there.

Peak sun and peak heat are NOT the same here in Arizona. Max temperatures occur around 4pm or so, where max insolation occurs around 1pm in the summer (check out solar noon charts.)

One question I have yet regarding charging of batteries on solar is somewhat related to what has been discussed here:
During the desulfation process when you have raised the voltage to reverse the chemical reaction, is there a minimum amount of current flow required? Of course low current would make the desulfation process take longer, but would say .1A @ 30v be enough to desulfate a large battery? In other words, what is the optimum amount of current @ a given voltage for the desulfation process, or is there one?

This also goes along with the objection I had about the cells not using current. It was stated that the current flow in a battery in the cells is always equal. However since current is a fixed quantity of electrons (coulombs) as electrons are captured to reverse the chemical process (molecules share electrons and to separate them one has to provide the lost electrons) the total count of electrons flowing past a cell should be the total number to begin with minus those captured in the electrochemical process of desulfation. Therefore the coulombs of electrons moving to the next cell in the circuit is diminished.

It's a physical electron capture process, is it not? I don't believe that just providing sufficient potential is adequate unless somehow there is another source of electrons available for the chemistry to occur without reducing the quantity of electrons flowing. Personally, I think that you guys are thinking of a charger, that keeps the current at a fixed value, a constant current source. However in a solar charger, you are limited to the amount of current available from the panels. You can't get more than that. So each string would use it's portion of the total current available (resistors in parallel) and that would be the maximum amount that could enter any battery string. From that fixed quantity one has to subtract the electrons captured in the first cell, that will give a lower number available to the next cell.

This then is where I have an issue (and perhaps it is a misunderstanding) which I need clarification on. The only way that I can see that the current is kept constant is if one had an infinite (or excess) amount of power available, like line current for a charger.
 
  • #65
BernieM said:
I also tried my clamp on ammeter but it showed no a/c as well.

What is the model of your clamp on ammeter? If you clamp it around the cable to the pair where the failures are occurring, what does it measure when you are charging? And what does it say when you have a substantial load on the inverter?
 
  • #66
The Electrician said:
What is the model of your clamp on ammeter? If you clamp it around the cable to the pair where the failures are occurring, what does it measure when you are charging? And what does it say when you have a substantial load on the inverter?
Also, does it read the same at the positive terminal of a series string as at the negative terminal of the string? How about the reading on the jumper between the two batteries of a series string?
 
  • #67
Tom.G said:
Also, does it read the same at the positive terminal of a series string as at the negative terminal of the string? How about the reading on the jumper between the two batteries of a series string?

Well that's the funny thing. As everyone has been telling me that current is equal throughout the whole battery, the other day toward afternoon when the max amps available for charging was around 10 amps or so from the array, I decided to use my ammeter in-line (not clamp on) with a pair of batteries. First I measured the amps going into the battery at the + connection and read 10 amps. Then I broke the wire connecting the first battery (+ connected one that I had tested) and put my ammeter in line there. 0 amps. In my apparently incorrect thinking on this subject, I saw it as the power being consumed by the cells and that until each cell was satisfied (charged) no current gets to flow to the next cell, all power first being consumed by the first battery and then when it was full on to charging the second, producing a battery that is lower in voltage than it's mate in the pair. Which fits the problem I have described. But this doesn't fit other battery pairs I see either. Some pairs are in fact both charged equally. So I think this 0A charge problem to the 2nd battery is indicative of some kind of a problem with the first battery. Which also fits with my original problem. That one battery gets overcharged, and eventually fails, while the other battery in the string gets undercharged and sulfated. But I can not reckon what it could possibly be as there is no complete circuit for current to flow without current flowing through the 2nd battery to ground!

The only possible way I can reconcile this is either it has to do with the chemical reactions that do or can take place in a battery (perhaps something that can happen when a cell has a certain type of failure?) or that my meter was not reading properly for some odd reason (bad meter, bad leads, poor connection?) when I connected it between the two batteries in series.

I unfortunately have not had time to revisit this test, but intend to do so today or tomorrow. But I want to put 2 ammeters in line, one at the + and one between the two batteries to get a simultaneous read, as well as show voltage. In that way if I do repeat the results I can take a picture of it and post it here. Either that or see that my original measurements were problematic and get a proper reading.

The Electrician said:
What is the model of your clamp on ammeter? If you clamp it around the cable to the pair where the failures are occurring, what does it measure when you are charging? And what does it say when you have a substantial load on the inverter?

Just some cheap clamp on ammeter that a friend bought me from Harbor Freight. But it does work. I don't know it is sensitive enough however for small current flows. I will have to make the measurements to answer the rest of the questions. I think I have another pair in failure now, considering the results I saw recently when I did the current flow tests, so that will be a good pair to test and then to keep an eye on.
 
  • #68
BernieM, I would highly recommend that you get yourself one of these: http://www.ebay.com/itm/LCD-Digital-Clamp-Meter-Multimeter-True-RMS-AC-DC-Volt-Amp-Ohm-Temp-Tester-D0K8/401215156842?ssPageName=STRK:MEBIDX:IT&_trksid=p2060353.m2749.l2649

Until recently, low cost clamp on ammeters could only read AC current, but this one is an example of the low cost high performance clampons available today which can measure DC as well as AC. With one of these you could quickly measure the DC current (or AC ripple) in each battery during charge and discharge.

I saw these discussed on another forum and realized it could solve a problem that had been bugging me. I was experiencing a very slow discharge of the battery in my van so that in a week the battery would be dead. I bought a more sensitive one made by the same company: http://www.ebay.com/itm/True-RMS-AC-DC-Current-Digital-Clamp-Meter-Multimeter-2000Counts-UNI-T-UT210E-US/291374904701?ssPageName=STRK:MEBIDX:IT&_trksid=p2060353.m2749.l2649

The more sensitive one has a 2 amp full scale range and can detect mere milliamps of DC. I tracked down the vampire load in my van easily without having to cut or disconnect any wiring.

Disclaimer: I get no commission if you or anyone else buys one of these.
 
  • #69
BernieM said:
Well that's the funny thing. As everyone has been telling me that current is equal throughout the whole battery, the other day toward afternoon when the max amps available for charging was around 10 amps or so from the array, I decided to use my ammeter in-line (not clamp on) with a pair of batteries. First I measured the amps going into the battery at the + connection and read 10 amps. Then I broke the wire connecting the first battery (+ connected one that I had tested) and put my ammeter in line there. 0 amps. In my apparently incorrect thinking on this subject, I saw it as the power being consumed by the cells and that until each cell was satisfied (charged) no current gets to flow to the next cell, all power first being consumed by the first battery and then when it was full on to charging the second, producing a battery that is lower in voltage than it's mate in the pair. Which fits the problem I have described. But this doesn't fit other battery pairs I see either. Some pairs are in fact both charged equally. So I think this 0A charge problem to the 2nd battery is indicative of some kind of a problem with the first battery. Which also fits with my original problem. That one battery gets overcharged, and eventually fails, while the other battery in the string gets undercharged and sulfated. But I can not reckon what it could possibly be as there is no complete circuit for current to flow without current flowing through the 2nd battery to ground!

The only possible way I can reconcile this is either it has to do with the chemical reactions that do or can take place in a battery (perhaps something that can happen when a cell has a certain type of failure?) or that my meter was not reading properly for some odd reason (bad meter, bad leads, poor connection?) when I connected it between the two batteries in series.

I unfortunately have not had time to revisit this test, but intend to do so today or tomorrow. But I want to put 2 ammeters in line, one at the + and one between the two batteries to get a simultaneous read, as well as show voltage. In that way if I do repeat the results I can take a picture of it and post it here. Either that or see that my original measurements were problematic and get a proper reading.
Just some cheap clamp on ammeter that a friend bought me from Harbor Freight. But it does work. I don't know it is sensitive enough however for small current flows. I will have to make the measurements to answer the rest of the questions. I think I have another pair in failure now, considering the results I saw recently when I did the current flow tests, so that will be a good pair to test and then to keep an eye on.

When you have large batteries, heavy duty (low resistance, in other words) cables, and multiple parallel and series connections among many batteries, breaking a connection to insert an in-line ammeter can change the way current flows in the whole arrangement distribute themselves. That's a good reason to have one of the clamp on ammeters I linked above. Using a clamp on you aren't disturbing the current flows by inserting the resistance of an in-line ammeter in the circuit. The clamp on gives you a way to quickly measure any of the currents without disturbance.
 
  • #70
The Electrician said:
BernieM, I would highly recommend that you get yourself one of these: http://www.ebay.com/itm/LCD-Digital-Clamp-Meter-Multimeter-True-RMS-AC-DC-Volt-Amp-Ohm-Temp-Tester-D0K8/401215156842?ssPageName=STRK:MEBIDX:IT&_trksid=p2060353.m2749.l2649

Until recently, low cost clamp on ammeters could only read AC current, but this one is an example of the low cost high performance clampons available today which can measure DC as well as AC. With one of these you could quickly measure the DC current (or AC ripple) in each battery during charge and discharge.

I saw these discussed on another forum and realized it could solve a problem that had been bugging me. I was experiencing a very slow discharge of the battery in my van so that in a week the battery would be dead. I bought a more sensitive one made by the same company: http://www.ebay.com/itm/True-RMS-AC-DC-Current-Digital-Clamp-Meter-Multimeter-2000Counts-UNI-T-UT210E-US/291374904701?ssPageName=STRK:MEBIDX:IT&_trksid=p2060353.m2749.l2649

The more sensitive one has a 2 amp full scale range and can detect mere milliamps of DC. I tracked down the vampire load in my van easily without having to cut or disconnect any wiring.

Disclaimer: I get no commission if you or anyone else buys one of these.

You asked me what brand I used to take the measurements. You did not ask me if I had other ammeters. To that, the answer is yes, a wide variety of them from DC clamp on ammeters made by Snap On, to wire it in and leave it type ammeters, meters that show alternatively amps, volts, watts, etc., a bench meter with an ammeter in it, two DMM's with amps in a variety of ranges, etc. I don't think I am going to be needing another one.

If taking a reading would influence the flow of current, then it would have equally disturbed such flow when I put it in line with the + terminal to the first battery as it would at the second battery in the series. Besides, ammeters are very low resistance, theoretically zero ohms. I am sure the resistance is very very low, and if an extremely low resistance would cause issues, then likewise any inductor in a clamp on ammeter that allows it to detect current flow (remember an inductor needs to have a changing field so they have to make a/c out of the d/c or pulse dc anyhow) then the collapsing field would induce a corresponding counter emf, which in turn would act like a small resistance, similar I bet to the very low resistance in an inline ammeter. But I don't really want to debate that here.
 

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