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Charge Controllers and Clippers => The "Classic" charge controller => Topic started by: theojkett on February 27, 2016, 01:50:25 PM

Title: Blank Display
Post by: theojkett on February 27, 2016, 01:50:25 PM
 >:(
Hi all,
I purchased the Classic 150 which was part of an off-Grid package I purchase from Wholesale Solar.  It was already pre-assembled to the Magna Power Center and up until yesterday, functioned normally and fine.

I installed this system is installed on my remote home in upstate New York, which I visit twice a month, in September of 2015 and it has worked wonderfully. Operating completely on solar power is a blessing.  Of course that changed when the winter arrived and now the system shuts down when the power level drops to 60% thanks to less sunlight and colder temps.  But I would run the generator for a couple of hours and it would charge the batteries back to 100% and I'd have power back  and all would be good and the sun would do the rest.

When I arrived on Friday night, it was 11 Degrees F... and I saw that the power was off.  I went to the shed and checked the system like I always do and saw that all I was getting was a blinking "Dead Battery Charge" fault on the Magnum Control panel and only 5.6V of power.  The Midnight Classic 150 was off and showing a blank screen.  This I have never seen in all these months I've had the system.  So I started the generator, like I usually do, and figured it would charge like it normally would and I'd be good to go.  But no. Two hours later the voltage on the Control center still showed a whopping 6V and I still had a blank screen on the Classic 150.  I have now had the generator running for over 14 hours and the charge controller is still off and I have a blank screen. 

I did see that there is a small flat battery behind the display.  Does this have anything to do with the operation of the Classic?  If that battery is dead, is the whole system dead?

Mind you, I was here two weeks ago and everything worked normally. Power was on I had power in the house and all was well.  NOTHING has changed in the last two weeks.  I haven't touched a thing. 

The manual says to check the connections and check the voltage at the batteries and the CC.  I don't have a volt meter but the Control panel is telling me the batteries are now fluctuating between 6 and 7.2V.  All of the connections are fine.  Again, NOTHING has changed in the last two weeks.

The system is NOT connected to the internet and No, I have not done any firmware upgrades or changed anything.  The system is the same now as it was when I installed in back on labor day 2015.  It worked great 2 weeks ago and now it doesn't and I don't know why.

I don't know what to do.  I'm at a loss and wholesale solar isn't around on weekends to help me.  SOMEBODY HELP!!!

Ted
Title: Re: Blank Display
Post by: Westbranch on February 27, 2016, 02:01:55 PM
Big Breath needed...  did you check the electrolyte levels in all   battery cells?

Tell us more about the entire system including loads, right now we do not know anything other than you have a Classic 150 and a magnum inverter...  Solar panels?

at 60 % you are about  10% away from the target minimum DoD...   How long does it take to get to that level from arrival?

more to come, once data sent re system..
Title: Re: Blank Display
Post by: Vic on February 27, 2016, 02:06:30 PM
Hi Ted,

Welcome to the Forum.

Believe that the Classic needs about 8 volts,  or so to have enough energy to even boot-up.

The small battery in the MNGP (the display on a Standard Classic),  is there to run the time-of-day clock in the MNGP.

Some Inverter-Chargers are not able to charge   D E A D  batteries.  And at less than six volts,  your batteries are very,  very dead.  Probably damaged beyond any recovery.  And,  do not know the temperature of the battery bank,  but if they were not fairly warm,  then the batteries have probably been FROZEN to death,  as well.

We know almost nothing about your system.   What is the nominal battery voltage?

You must have left the inverter running during your recent absence,  and sometimes,  even with no other loads on the system,  but the inverter,  with very little PV input,  the inverter will run down the batteries.

You will want to get a good Mulit-Meter for that location,  and if your batteries are Flooded Lead Acid (FLA),  then you should get a Hydrometer to read the SG of each cell.

AND,  you might want to get an external battery charger,  and a few other things,  as well.

If you are handy,  you might be able to connect the PVs directly to the battery,  through  one of the circuit breakers on the system.  You will have to be the Charge Controller,  and you will want to disconnect this connection when you will not be there ...

Expect that your batteries are toast,  and trying to charge frozen batteries is a very bad idea,  and so on.

Please let us know how you are doing.

FWIW,    Good Luck,   Vic
Title: Re: Blank Display
Post by: theojkett on February 27, 2016, 02:12:53 PM
Here is the system I bought and installed.

http://www.wholesalesolar.com/1890710/wholesale-solar/complete-systems/the-homestead-2.3-kw-9-panel-astronergy-off-grid-solar-system

9 panels, 8 Rolls batteries, 48V system.

The load on the system when I am not here is a heaping 93 watts.  13 watts on an LED light on my front porch and 80 heat tape for my water line in the crawl space.

No, I have not checked the batteries electrolyte level.... didn't know I had to, but now that you mentioned that I wonder if the water in the batteries could have frozen.  I mean it was 11 Degrees (F) outside (it's a toasty 28 now). Is that possible?  If it did, would that cause the problem?

Wholesale Solar did send me this gauge scope thing that I guess is used to look inside the batteries, but honestly I don't know what the hell I'm doing and wouldn't know what I'm looking at anyway.

Instruct me.
Title: Re: Blank Display
Post by: theojkett on February 27, 2016, 02:29:30 PM
Oh... the batteries are AMG.... don't know if that makes a difference.

Please don't tell me my $3000 batteries are dead. 
Title: Re: Blank Display
Post by: Vic on February 27, 2016, 02:30:09 PM
Hi Ted,

Thanks for some added info ...

Just did a quick look at that Link,  did not see the Classic or the batteries ...

93 Watts is a reasonable load on the system,  even if it is not running 24/7,  but it might be.

And,  we do not know about how much PV energy has been produced in your absence.

When a 48 volt battery bank is taken down to about 6 volts,   the batteries have been damaged SO badly,  that the reason for this voltage reading becomes less important.

You will need to plan on buying new batteries.   And,  you will need to plan on shutting off the inverter in your absence,  IMO,  at least during the cold/cool months.  You will need to plan on learning much more about off-grid power systems,  battery tending,  battery maintenance,  and so on.

Not to be too hard on you.  Vic
Title: Re: Blank Display
Post by: Vic on February 27, 2016, 02:36:47 PM
Hi Ted,

OK,  you have AGM batteries,  this might,  possibly not be so bad when "frozen",  as Flooded batteries would be ...

BUT,  even if the AGMs were not excessively damaged by being very cold,  discharging batteries dead flat,  is very very bad for them.   Some of the cells will certainly have been discharged to 0.00 volts,  and further discharging beyond that,  "charges"  these cells in reverse.  This reverse charging just kills that cell,  and the battery that it is in.   Those cells actually forget that they ever were a battery.

I have not,  ever run or frozen any AGMs (or,  luckily any other battery),   but would expect that between the cold and having being run dead flat,  there is very little hope for them.

My opinions,    Vic
Title: Re: Blank Display
Post by: theojkett on February 27, 2016, 02:48:45 PM
I just checked the batteries and used the spectrometer.  They are all frozen solid and what little fluid I could get out of them I used and the spectrometer says that are all zero's. 

Does this mean that I have to buy new batteries?  What happens when they thaw out?  Can they be charged and will they work again?
Title: Re: Blank Display
Post by: Vic on February 27, 2016, 03:07:58 PM
Quote from: theojkett on February 27, 2016, 02:29:30 PM
Oh... the batteries are AMG.... don't know if that makes a difference   ...

Sorry Ted,   read that "AMG",  as AGM.

BUT,  if you have batteries,  with easily removable caps,  then they are FLAs  -- Flooded batteries.

Regarding the possible future use of those batteries,  we know of only two things about them, that would have KILLED them;

1.  They have been FROZEN.
2.  They have been run down to a very low State Of Charge.  If there were no DC loads on the battery,  other than the Inverter,  and the Classic,  then,  perhaps there were no cells charged in reverse.  I do not know the Low Voltage Disconnect (LVD)  that is standard for that Magnum inverter.

But,  still,   freezing a battery is sudden death on them.  As the water in the electrolyte freezes,  it expands.  This places a lot of mechanical force on the internals of the battery.   Have never frozen a battery,  but this is often said to be death for such batteries.

I would suggest that you avoid trying to do any battery charging until they have completely thawed.

It is possible that the freezing process causes the electrolyte to Stratify more than might have been the case just before the freezing process began.   So,  the SG of the electrolyte may not be zero,  but,  my opinion,  your batteries are toast.

Others might be a bit more sanguine,  but  just my opinions.
Good Luck,   Vic
Title: Re: Blank Display
Post by: theojkett on February 27, 2016, 03:16:30 PM
Thanks Vic.

The company I bought this system from never made any recommendations or comments or advised me on the proper or best place to house this system.  I even send them pictures of what I was doing and they said it was good.  So they should have advised me to NOT store the batteries where they could freeze.

I've contacted Rolls to see if this might be a warrantee thing, but I suspect the will laugh at me.

Dammit.  I spend nearly $13K on this system and now I can't use it.  S.O.B .!!!!  Shame on me, shame on them....
Title: Re: Blank Display
Post by: Westbranch on February 27, 2016, 03:28:54 PM
their ad states  'Easy-to-Install
An easy-to-install Four Star Solar Mini Magnum MS4448PAE Power Center will get your off-grid home up and running in no time! Four Star Solar has assembled your Magnum Energy MS4448PAE inverter and all of the necessary safety components, then wired and tested the whole inverter system. This saves you time and money and eliminates the risk of installing the inverter wrong or forgetting a crucial piece.'


I would interpret that to mean they have set all the charge parameters and it is ready to go as soon as the panels are in place, hooked up to their diagrams etc...

My opinion is that the charge settings may not have been properly set or as mentioned before that
the 93W (~ 2amps at 48V) should not have  killed your batteries that quickly..( ~2 weeks)

I am thinking that the CC settings are not fine tuned to your battery banks needs..

Did you ever do a commissioning charge after finishing assembly? 
Did the seller 'tell you' that the cells had been given a boost just before delivering them to you?...
Title: Re: Blank Display
Post by: Vic on February 27, 2016, 03:35:55 PM
Hi Ted,

First,  fully-charged Lead Acid batteries have a freezing temperature below zero F,  IIRC  --  there are tables for this information.

IMO,  it was most probably the loads on the system that discharged the batteries to a point that the Inverter shut off.   The inverter probably needs at least 25 watts just to run it,  with NO loads,  it might need 35 watts or so,  forget.   Then,  there are the loads.   So,  that could be about 2.5 Amp Hours removed from the battery for every hour that all of these loads ran.  With only the inverter running,  the total for 24 hours could easily be 720 Watt Hours  --  about 15 Ah for just the inverter,  every day.

Then,  batteries loose Capacity,  as the temperature decreases below 77 F.

One large unknown,  is how much PV power was produced in your absence.

Most folks who have off-grid systems in cold climates,  shut off all loads,  turn off their inverter,  and,  often change charge parameters on their CCs to just kind of Float the batteries,  at a low-ish voltage.   But,   these folks are often gone for some months during the depths of Winter.

Am not certain that your supplier knew that you planned on running the inverter during your absence,  AND there would be some AC loads on it.

Do you have the remote panel for the Magnum inverter?
What is the model number of the Surrettes?

More Later,  Thanks,   Vic
Title: Re: Blank Display
Post by: zoneblue on February 27, 2016, 04:03:23 PM
This is a sad ole storey mate. Did you install this system? Your writing points to someone not familiar enough with the maintenance requirements of this install. Usually if there is an installer involved they are sure to leave a detailed maintenance regime. If it was self installed, then that responsibility falls directly to you. And the gear manufacturers are not at all responsible.

Ouch. But again not to be too hard on you, but operating a power system does require a pretty good grasp of batteries and there ever quirky and demanding needs.

As Vic said in cold weather lead acid batteries MUST stay at high levels of charge to avoid freezing the electrolyte. This is CRITICAL. The freezing temp of the electrolyte of a fully charged battery is really hard to reach, no matter how cold. But a flat battery its just literally like water inside, goes solid at 32F. Thus as in unattended installation, leaving the inverter on in winter was just really unfortunate, and was the cause of this battery fatality. This is because in addition to the 90 watts of load on your system, you have the inverter idle, the charge controller idle, and maybe the odd other thing. Lets look at that:
- loads =93W *1/0.85 *24h = 2650Wh/d
- inverter = 25W *24h = 600Wh/d
- CC = 5W *24h= 120Wh/d
- total ~= 3400Wh/day

Thats NOT trivial, not by a long shot. Even if the sun were shining and there was no snow on the array, that system would be producing :
- North east US assumed, mid winter call it 2 effective sun hours (http://www.solar-electric.com/media/wysiwyg/Map3.gif)
- 2340Wp *0.77 *2h = 3600Wh/d

See how close that is? Wouldnt take much at all in the way of bad weather to mess with that. But then what happens if you get snow on the array, even a bit along  one  edge... panel and string design means that production plummets.... now you really have a serious production deficit, and the battery SOC drops, then it charges less efficiently because its cold.. keeps dropping until it freezes,  and the terminal voltage drops to almost zero.

Strongly advice that you head over to the NAWs forum for some upskilling before you replace that bank... and yes, it will need replacing. Consder the 3K an education. Sorry this is so blunt. Feeling your pain.




Title: Re: Blank Display
Post by: Resthome on February 27, 2016, 04:11:44 PM
Did they supply the Classic Battery Temperature Sensor and was it installed on the batteries? I doubt the Classic was configured since they sell the batteries separately.

I agree with Vic suspect it was the fact that the batteries were drained and not fully charged that made them susceptible to freezing. And if you have been using these batteries since Labor Day 2015 without checking the water levels (assuming they are Flooded batteries as there appears to be some debate about that) they could have been low on water to begin with. As Vic said the colder the batteries the less AH they will provide.

With 2.43kW of panels I would have though even with clouds you would have gotten some charging once the invertor hit the low voltage disconnect point, but most likely not enough to fully charge the battery bank. Also I think that just cuts the AC loads off you would still have the load of the invertor, Classic and any other DC loads draining the batteries after sunset for 12-14 hours this time of year.
Title: Re: Blank Display
Post by: theojkett on February 27, 2016, 05:27:24 PM
I get it guys. I need to be a bit more educated about this sort of thing.  I don't think I'm a complete idiot. I am mechanically inclined, I have to ability to build, wire and assemble.  Practical knowledge. But to make a few point in my defense....

The installation was tedious, but not complicated. The documentation was horrible at best, hence the hundreds of phone calls.  But, everything went together as it should have. I turned the system on and let it charge itself up with no loads.  I ran off of the generator for another the week after installation.  Then I connected the house to it.  AND for rest of September, October, November and most of December, those batteries never dropped below 75% worst case and that was at night. But the following day they would be back to 100% in no time.  I didn't use my generator once during that time. AND during that time I kept two lights on 24/7.   I have these panels placed where they will get direct sunlight from 11 a.m. to sundown. Then the cold weather happened.

Once the sunlight began to diminish, the system would shut down at 60%.  That's when I made even more phone calls to the place I bought the system and the knowledgeable dude on the other end.  Why is it shutting down? I'd ask.  This is why and he'd give me a short but to the point techno-babble answer.  What do I need to do to prevent it and/or prevent damage to the batteries? I'd ask.  Get more batteries and solar panels he'd say. Never once did he say "Shut off the inverter when you leave", "Shut off everything when you leave", "Keep the batteries warm". I don't want/need techno-babble, I need "Do this, do that and then do this".

I was / am a P.I.A. to these people.   I have been calling them and emailing them a few times a month during and post installation. I asked all the correct questions and even some that may seem stupid to you brainiacs.  I specifically asked if there were any settings I needed to adjust/make/check or fine tune before I put the system to work.  "No, it's already set, don't need to do anything". I asked about the storing the batteries outside. I asked about leaving on a light and more.  The only concern was the heat tape for the water line and was told it is a concern but shouldn't be a problem.

I checked the battery level when I got the batteries and two months later. Fine.  In fact even in the frozen state it appears to be fine as well (yes I know water expands).  There is a temperature sensor and it is hooked up but there is no documentation on how to use it or what I should expect.

I am just baffled how it could go so catastrophic, so fast when it was fine, seriously okay, 2 weeks ago.  I know for a fact that even when I was not here, though the temperatures were in the 20's, there was plenty of sunshine. I bought this system because of the recommendations and the EASE of installation and EASE of use.  I may have fallen short on my knowledge of what I was getting into, but I was also under informed by the really poor documentation and guy that sold me the system.

Okay, the bottom line is for the next month or two I will be operating on Generator (sadly) and when everything warms up and thaws out, I may or may not have functioning batteries, BUT in the meantime I should consider just buying new batteries (one at a time), storing them in the house in the utility room where it's heated. Move the entire inverter power center into the house and hope that the 60' from the house to the panels is not a problem. Shut everything down when I'm not here and expect to use my generator in the winter months.

Option #2:  Sell everything and move to Key West.

Thanks guys, I think I know what I need to do now.
Title: Re: Blank Display
Post by: Vic on February 27, 2016, 05:39:51 PM
But,  first,  Ted;

TWO QUESTIONS,  please;

1.  Do you have the Remote Panel for the Magnum Inverter (this allows you to Customize settings for many important parameters,  and not just use the Defaults).

2.  What model number of Surrette batteries do you have?

Quickly,  none of these off-grid systems is too complex,  just many things that matter quite a lot.  And,  new batteries usually start out GREAT,  but small things,  over a period of time tend to add up,  especially in Winter,  and this is when one knows that things were not always as great as they might have seemed.

More later,  Thanks for the answers,   Vic
Title: Re: Blank Display
Post by: Vic on February 27, 2016, 05:44:52 PM
Ted,

Every charge source needs to have its own Battery Temperature Sensor (BTS),  unless they can be shared (this sharing is almost always when a single manufacturer has made the inverter,  and CC,  etc).   So,  on your system,  as we understand it needs one BTS for the Inverter,  and one for the Classic  --  these should be placed on a single battery near the center of the bank,  about half-way down the case of that battery ...  better yet,  they should be covered with some Styrofoam(r) for insulation ...

Later,  Vic
Title: Re: Blank Display
Post by: Westbranch on February 27, 2016, 05:56:07 PM
RE buying new batteries...Do NOT buy them one at a time. 

It is best to get them all with the same lot # (thus the same manufacturing date...)  then they will be matched as best as possible. 

Even better, to get them shipped all a once, and delivered as a unit... and double check the id numbers and date...
Title: Re: Blank Display
Post by: ClassicCrazy on February 28, 2016, 01:42:59 AM
If you get enough juice in your batteries to fire up the Classic - let us know what the charging and other parameters in it are set for. If you haven't connected to Local Status App on the computer - that makes it a lot easier to see and adjust everything. And you can make a backup  of your settings in case you ever need to reload them into the Classic - much easier than scrolling through menus on the MNGP display .

My guess is that either the temperature sensor might not be doing it's job if the settings in the classic were not set up correctly. And it is very possible that the Absorb time was not long enough to fully charge your batteries.

As others have said, the only way they can freeze is if the get severely discharged which it sounds like is what happened with yours. My batteries are out in an unheated shed in cold Wisconsin and have no problems doing their job all winter.  I have a small 24 watt or less DC load on all the time but I do shut off my inverter  when not around . 

I ruined a battery in the cold by not temperature compensating the charge on my first solar system - but back then it was a small one battery system so a good learning experience !

I hope your batteries come back to life.

Larry
Title: Re: Blank Display
Post by: Resthome on February 28, 2016, 05:48:03 AM
Ted

You came to the right place. The folks here are very knowledgable and provide great suggestions and help to all who are willing to participate.  And MidNite is one of the best companies around. They have a lot of videos and documentation on their web site so feel free to look around and if you don't find what you are looking for ask in the forums. I'm sure someone with the right answer will help. Including the designers and owners of MidNite as they participate here in the forums.

Spring is just around the corner!
Title: Re: Blank Display
Post by: zoneblue on February 28, 2016, 11:05:33 AM
Quote from: theojkett on February 27, 2016, 05:27:24 PM
I get it guys. I need to be a bit more educated about this sort of thing.  I don't think I'm a complete idiot. I am mechanically inclined, I have to ability to build, wire and assemble.  Practical knowledge.

Self installing a RE system is a deceptively complex thing. In my younger days i trained as an electrical engineer, and still it took me 2 months, 90 percent of which was spent doing research.

Quote
The documentation was horrible at best, hence the hundreds of phone calls. 

The analogy here is that i bought say a 12 ton excavator from a guy and expecting him to teach me how to drive it. Even though its a quality unit and comes with very technical documentation about its mechanical and electrical subsystems, but nothing about how do i use it. Its just not realistic to expect, im expected to be in the industry and have staff that know these things, after all it takes a lifetime to learn. Right?

And theres another reason that those kits are not at all the best route for DIY. This is that RE designs are so unique and load centric. Its critical that your system is balanced exactly to your exact load profile. The kit can never anticipate what you want to do with it. No two RE systems are alike.

Quote
But, everything went together as it should have. I turned the system on and let it charge itself up with no loads

The commissioning of these systems is critical. For one thing the classic alone has over a hundred different settings. Most of which are important, indeed critical. You say nothing about your setpoints, about how you managed the Surrettes notorious tough break in process. (they require persistently high levels of charge in the beginning). About WBJr and tcomp, both vital for the 100 percent important full charge of the battery. That you dont have a hydrometer regime  in place is the most basic of problems.

Quote
I ran off of the generator for another the week after installation.  Then I connected the house to it.  AND for rest of September, October, November and most of December, those batteries never dropped below 75% worst case and that was at night. But the following day they would be back to 100% in no time.

Youre talking about this like it was a microwave, that you just turn it on at X power and whatnot. Battery SOC is the hardest thing to measure, with SG being the only sure method. All electronic indicators are utterly dependent on correct programming and installation, and on there best day are only a guide. On a bad day you own worst enemy.

QuoteI didn't use my generator once during that time. AND during that time I kept two lights on 24/7.   I have these panels placed where they will get direct sunlight from 11 a.m. to sundown.

The VERY first thing to do is to make a load budget and get the irradiance data for your site. And talking to locals about snow patterns, so you know when array obstruction is to be expected. PV virtually shuts down, CC doenst even come out of sleep with snow on them. In these conditions the array is best almost vertical, for many reasons. Had you come here at the design stage we could have assisted you in all this.

QuoteThen the cold weather happened.
Once the sunlight began to diminish, the system would shut down at 60%.

When an inverter goes into LVD, even once, thats a serious wake up call that your design was inadequate, not the system, the design. LVD is to protect the inverter not the battery, and each time you take a battery that low, youve taken a year off its life.

Quote
That's when I made even more phone calls to the place I bought the system and the knowledgeable dude on the other end.  Why is it shutting down? I'd ask.  This is why and he'd give me a short but to the point techno-babble answer.  What do I need to do to prevent it and/or prevent damage to the batteries? I'd ask.  Get more batteries and solar panels he'd say. Never once did he say "Shut off the inverter when you leave", "Shut off everything when you leave", "Keep the batteries warm". I don't want/need techno-babble, I need "Do this, do that and then do this".

See above. Youve gotta take responsibility for your own education... this time before you buy the digger, and run it without hydraulic fluid. Otherwise you expecting the supplier to be the installer and that wasnt included in the package. As ive said a solar kit is a silly kind of thing. DIYed are always better off hand picking parts and ordering them one by one. The alternative is to use an professional installer, that avoids the steeep learning curve.

Quote
I was / am a P.I.A. to these people.   I have been calling them and emailing them a few times a month during and post installation. I asked all the correct questions and even some that may seem stupid to you brainiacs.  I specifically asked if there were any settings I needed to adjust/make/check or fine tune before I put the system to work.  "No, it's already set, don't need to do anything". I asked about the storing the batteries outside. I asked about leaving on a light and more.  The only concern was the heat tape for the water line and was told it is a concern but shouldn't be a problem.

You know when you go down to home depot and try to have an intelligent converstaion with the aisle staff about the intricacies of cement and water ratios, if you are really lucky on a good day youll hit a guy whose an ex tradie or just a passionate hobbiest, and such a conversion yeilds results. But 99 percent of the time youll be told which aisle the premix is in. Its unreasonable to expect more given the pay rates in retail these days.

Quote
I checked the battery level when I got the batteries and two months later. Fine.  In fact even in the frozen state it appears to be fine as well (yes I know water expands).  There is a temperature sensor and it is hooked up but there is no documentation on how to use it or what I should expect.

Battery maintenance takes two forms. At the beginning the critical step of ensuring the charge regime is just spot on. This takes a protracted period of tweaking, measuring, re-tweaking etc. Once your satisfied with that, then monthly maintenance kicks in. SG checks (and knowing how to do that to get a reliable reading), distilled water top up (if its not using water its not being charged properly), terminal clean etc. Load re evaluation (will i have enough charge resources still to match expected demand), array clean/adjust if needed.

Quote
I am just baffled how it could go so catastrophic, so fast when it was fine, seriously okay, 2 weeks ago. 

Mate, i think if your wise youll see that you over estimated your ability, and misunderstood the package you bought into. Wisdom= learning from mistakes etc.

Quote
I know for a fact that even when I was not here, though the temperatures were in the 20's, there was plenty of sunshine.

Remember what i said about the actual effective sun hours in the NE in winter? Sun hours is a technical term and universally overestimated. And lately the forums have been replete with stories of folk in your region with 10 day bleak spells.  Such things as the weather are specific measurable factors. In fact please reread the entire thread, because this is all solvable when you are ready to move on.

Quote
I bought this system because of the recommendations and the EASE of installation and EASE of use.  I may have fallen short on my knowledge of what I was getting into, but I was also under informed by the really poor documentation and guy that sold me the system.

OK so the kit didnt come included with a 500 page how to install solar ebook. But that knowledge can easily be obtained online if you are motivated, and persistent.

Time to man up and take responsibility for this pickle.

Quote
Okay, the bottom line is for the next month or two I will be operating on Generator (sadly) and when everything warms up and thaws out, I may or may not have functioning batteries, BUT in the meantime I should consider just buying new batteries (one at a time), storing them in the house in the utility room where it's heated.

No, no, no.

Quote
Move the entire inverter power center into the house and hope that the 60' from the house to the panels is not a problem. Shut everything down when I'm not here and expect to use my generator in the winter months.

Yep. You could do this or that. Or... you could do a proper system design exercise, and get a balanced functioning system.

Quote
Option #2:  Sell everything and move to Key West.
Thanks guys, I think I know what I need to do now.

Are you sure? The correct question to be asking is: what is NAWs?
Title: Re: Blank Display
Post by: zoneblue on February 28, 2016, 12:44:55 PM
So, to offset the bad news, I did a little reading on frozen batteries and a fully charged FLA will freeze at -77°F, a 75% SOC battery at -35°F, (and at 50% at -10°F). So your batterys are pretty safe outside as this is the std working range of lead acid systems.

http://jgdarden.com/batteryfaq/carfaq4.htm#freeze_points

And, it seems, anecdotally, that some people have had some success reviving frozen batteries.  The procedure basically involves:
-Under NO circumstances attempt to charge a frozen or partially frozen battery, as the gas pockets may explode.
- fully thawing is important and warming slowly to a suitable charge temp,
- checking all 4 sides of each battery for case integrity,
- not topping up unless the plates are uncovered,
- charging initially using a very low rate to avoid shattering the sulphate layer off the plate  (you want it to slowly reconvert).
- Then finally upping the rate to 0.1C and taking through a couple of absorb cycles if the voltage comes up.

If it did recover, i would be very cautious though, as the stress microcracks throughout the grids may not show up til later, and would watch such a bank like a hawk.

And whether its important to do it sooner rather than later? The usual rule with a flat battery is to recharge ASAP, but the freezing may suppress/suspend the chemical reactions that form hard sulphate?... or it may just freeze even harder and fail completely?

Surrette would be the ones to talk to about your chances.
Title: Re: Blank Display
Post by: dgd on February 28, 2016, 02:34:21 PM
Zoneblue,

Thanks for your patience in posting those detailed replies   ;)
As the OP says its all to do with education or lack thereof, its good ppl like you and especially Vic have the time and patience to assist, qualities that BTW I struggle with..
Too often I wish there was a PV 101 course or even a Dummies Guide to Solar PV energy as so many of what appear obvious pitfalls repeatedly trap the newbie. Few also seem to do an Electricity 101 course or reading before jumping into the unknown (e.g.that recent pic of a KID and MNPV6 combiner all wired with red cable, would that pass any level of inspection/approval?).

dgd
Title: Re: Blank Display
Post by: mike90045 on February 28, 2016, 04:06:34 PM
So sorry for your loss.  Taking a 48V bank to 6V AND freezing it, is pretty much going to kill it, forever.  i doubt even in expert hands, it is salvageable.  :'(

For recovery, I would suggest you get 8 golf cart 6V batteries and wire in series for 48V.  Pretty much just what you had before, but much smaller (and cheaper) batteries that you can learn from, and then in the summer, after you have things figured out, rebuild your large battery bank with 8 big batteries.
You should also get a 48V battery charger (golf cart store again) that you can connect independently to your generator to charge batteries with if the inverter is unable to charge things.  Having many layers of backup is critical in off grid systems.  I have 3 generators, and 120V charger to run from them, and the 2 solar and  1 inverter chargers.

But learning how the entire system works, and how all the parts work together is the first thing, before you spend much more money.   We can help with that.

The little coin battery in the back of the graphic panel, will run the clock for a couple months before it runs down.  I don't recall if it also backs up all the charger settings.   If you are handy with a computer, you can control the charger with a computer and save and recall settings to a file on the PC.
Title: Re: Blank Display
Post by: zoneblue on February 28, 2016, 09:09:11 PM
dgd, ive got bl**dy appendictus, so im bedbound, and bored as hell.

Mikes suggestion is a good one, learner bank etc. Theres a saying in teh industry you always kill your first bank.  So... tick.
Title: Re: Blank Display
Post by: estragon on February 29, 2016, 05:18:19 PM
I've just had a similar mishap to the op's.  System worked fine last winter, but this winter's weather was different.  Milder and a a bit more snow early on.  The milder early winter meant ice was late in forming, so cabin wasn't accessible until mid-Jan.  I got tied up and didn't make it out to check on it until a couple of weeks ago. 

As it turns out, snow had covered the panels sometime in mid-Dec.  Everything is turned off but the classics, but the resting tare + self discharge brought the batteries dead.  I fired up a little honda to try getting a charge started, but the outbacks (48v) wouldn't wake up with the ac, so I started with a little 12v charger doing the batteries in groups of 2.  The electrolyte wasn't solid, but definitely slushy in some cells.

The next day, I got the last of the snow off the panels, and the classics came alive.  Once the voltage on the batteries came up far enough, the outbacks came alive as well, and by the end of the day the batteries were well into absorb.  As near as I could tell, once the batteries were at that point, they were charging/discharging about as I'd expect.

I'm thinking that even though the batteries were sitting in a badly discharged state for some time, the cold temps (~25f) would have slowed the reactions that would otherwise harden the sulfate.

I'll be back out in the next few days to check again, but it looks like there's hope.  I'll check the sg and run eq if need be.

So, if I was the op, I wouldn`t give up on the bank just yet.  FWIW
Title: Re: Blank Display
Post by: dgd on February 29, 2016, 05:29:20 PM
Quote from: zoneblue on February 28, 2016, 09:09:11 PM
dgd, ive got bl**dy appendictus, so im bedbound, and bored as hell.

Not good, but I suppose on the positive side there is all that C++ code you can develope in bed with your laptop  :)
Title: Re: Blank Display
Post by: dgd on February 29, 2016, 05:37:48 PM
Quote from: estragon on February 29, 2016, 05:18:19 PM
As it turns out, snow had covered the panels sometime in mid-Dec.  Everything is turned off but the classics, but the resting tare + self discharge brought the batteries dead.   

Moving further off-topic... (apologies)
thats a good argument for having a small wind generator directly connected to the battery bank or connected to the input of the Classic where the PV array will be a voltage clipper and stop things getting silly.

dgd
Title: Re: Blank Display
Post by: mike90045 on February 29, 2016, 08:46:29 PM
Quote from: dgd on February 29, 2016, 05:37:48 PM...
thats a good argument for having a small wind generator directly connected to the battery bank or connected to the input of the Classic where the PV array will be a voltage clipper and stop things getting silly.....dgd

Wow.  if the snow and ice does not jam the turbine, the PV array acts as clipper.      As long as the array is larger then the turbine.
Title: Re: Blank Display
Post by: Vic on March 01, 2016, 12:15:55 AM
Quote from: zoneblue on February 28, 2016, 09:09:11 PM
dgd, ive got bl**dy appendictus, so im bedbound, and bored as hell   ...

zoneblue,  very sorry to hear of your appendicitis.  Take care,  and best wishes for a rapid and full recovery.

Vic
Title: Re: Blank Display
Post by: ClassicCrazy on March 01, 2016, 08:33:19 AM
Quote from: estragon on February 29, 2016, 05:18:19 PM
I've just had a similar mishap to the op's.  ......

I'll be back out in the next few days to check again, but it looks like there's hope.  I'll check the sg and run eq if need be.

So, if I was the op, I wouldn`t give up on the bank just yet.  FWIW

Glad you were able to make the save before it was too late ! 
Title: Re: Blank Display
Post by: boB on March 01, 2016, 05:35:26 PM
Quote from: mike90045 on February 29, 2016, 08:46:29 PM
Quote from: dgd on February 29, 2016, 05:37:48 PM...
thats a good argument for having a small wind generator directly connected to the battery bank or connected to the input of the Classic where the PV array will be a voltage clipper and stop things getting silly.....dgd

Wow.  if the snow and ice does not jam the turbine, the PV array acts as clipper.      As long as the array is larger then the turbine.

Yes, absolutely correct.  This can work fine but gotta give the typical CYA speech.  YMMV.

boB