We had one of the poorest Decembers for power generation that I can ever remember. There was about two days of sunshine for the month. We had good wind, which kept us from burning the gen fuel for much of the month. But without the solar working my system has no way to regulate the voltage properly to absorb charge the bank. The power from the turbines is either too much (and dumping), or just enough to meet the loads and keep the lights on. And sometimes none at all.
Over the last week the performance of my battery bank (24 Rolls T12's, 24 volt) got really bad. With heavy evening time loads (usually average 1,800 watts with peak load up to ~6 kW when the electric water heater is going), the bank would hold 24.0 volts OK. But overnight with all of our Christmas lights going (about 350 watts), furnace blower, ''fridge, freezer, night lights, furnace in my shop, and probably some other small parasitic loads, the bank would be down to 23.5 volts by sunup. I got the "quiet time" for the gen set from 11:00 at night to 6:00 in the morning. So at 6:00 AM the inverter would immediately start the gen and charge the bank up, if the wind isn't blowing.
Yesterday, over my morning coffee, I punched the calculator keys and figured out the loads and what we're using vs what the bank is supposed to have for capacity. The bank was delivering less than half of its rated capacity. I scrolled thru the menus on the master inverter and it said the bank temp was down to 2° C.
The bank is in an insulated battery case in our utility room and the utility room is unheated. But it normally stays above freezing in the utility room and heat from charging the batteries normally keeps them above 15° C. The poor power month and not charging them properly let the cold gradually seep in until the whole 1.5 tons of lead in the bank was cold soaked all the way thru.
It took 7 hours with a 45,000 BTU space heater heating the inside of the battery case to get them up to 20° C. I then put a 6 hour equalization charge on them with the generator and inverter-chargers and got them up to 28° C.
What a difference!
Not a single amp of power coming in from turbines overnight, just another day here with heavy overcast and no sun. And the wind is just starting to pick up and the turbines are starting to spool up for the day (wind is supposed to blow 30-40 mph later tonight). But my bank never even dropped below 25.0 volts overnight.
I guess this could be termed Nursing Care for batteries - keep 'em warm and feed 'em

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Chris