Moped
Full Member
- Posts
- 963
- Likes
- 1,111
We are on a site in Spain for an extended period as it is low cost and cheaper than paid for aires in the area.
I have the battery charger turned off as there is enough daily sun to fully charge the lead acid battery during the day.
The thinking (rightly or wrongly) that I won’t be using as much of the sites hook up reducing electric consumption and any final electric surcharge over and beyond the daily allowance of 5kw.
Now I could turn the battery charger on and keep the leisure battery pretty much fully charged on a trickle charge. Not sure what the impact of this would be on hook up energy consumption.
But the question is, from a battery life point of view, is it better to permit the battery to discharge to 70% each night and allow solar to fully charge the next day, or to turn the charger on and maintain the battery in a trickle charge state whilst using the 12v system nightly?
And as a supplementary question, what might the impact of leaving the charger turned on 24/7 on hook up electric consumption?
I have the battery charger turned off as there is enough daily sun to fully charge the lead acid battery during the day.
The thinking (rightly or wrongly) that I won’t be using as much of the sites hook up reducing electric consumption and any final electric surcharge over and beyond the daily allowance of 5kw.
Now I could turn the battery charger on and keep the leisure battery pretty much fully charged on a trickle charge. Not sure what the impact of this would be on hook up energy consumption.
But the question is, from a battery life point of view, is it better to permit the battery to discharge to 70% each night and allow solar to fully charge the next day, or to turn the charger on and maintain the battery in a trickle charge state whilst using the 12v system nightly?
And as a supplementary question, what might the impact of leaving the charger turned on 24/7 on hook up electric consumption?