This was in fact the case. I changed multiple settings after reading through your reply and some additional research.With that said. I set the Absorption to 28.8. The minimum recommended Absorption by SOK suggests 14.4 (x2).However, I am still getting a glitch every morning. No complete power failure but glitches.
Most likely the cells are not balanced. I would set the absorption and float voltages both to 28.4 for a few days. Holding the batteries at a higher float voltage for a few days will give the internal balancer an opportunity to do it's job. Most likely the BMS's have passive balancers which are fairly low current and usually only work near the absorption level. Edit to add: I just went back and reread your original post. You say you are running 12v batteries in series/parallel. You really need to have a balancer between the series connected batteries. Unlike lead acid batteries, lifepo4 batteries can and will get out of balance when in series. Victron makes a nice little 1 amp automatic balancer just for this purpose.https://www.victronenergy.com/batteries/battery-balancer
Yes. You mentioned that in a previous post. Makes sense. Also, I'm not certain I understand what causes the jump. Or a better way of saying it is...I don't understand why the jump is an effect of unbalanced cells. Still lots to learn.I should also mention, the glitch is on the AC side and always corresponds with the spike. Specifically right at the start. Then everything normalizes despite the increased voltage for two or three hours.The give away is the dehumidifier quits and the oven chimes when the clock powers back on. But once powered back on they behave normally.
The jump in voltage is usually caused by the BMS disconnecting the battery momentarily, which is usually caused by either a high bank voltage, or a cell imbalance. If cells are not balanced, then a cell can reach the high cell voltage
The battery balancer will be delivered today. I'll install it this week.This is a snapshot of what occurred this morning. This is the highest voltage jump yet. Complete power loss on the AC side. No interruption on the DC side. I don't understand that.This is the 3rd day of having the absorption voltage and float voltage set to the same voltage (28.80)
Before I post anything with regards to voltage data...Am I right to assume the data I'm collecting is trash if I have a battery imbalance?
When comparing the voltage using the BMV 712 to one my charge controllers, this is the result (see image).My charge controller max voltage is near or exceeds the battery disconnect despite having the absorption set to 28.80. It's my understanding the BMV uses a certain amount of time to calculate the voltage. As a result it isn't capturing the higher voltage seen by the controller.This tells me two things.1. The charge controller is eventually regulating the charge down to the absorption setting of 28.80. This is why the bmv doesn't report voltage over 28.802. The charge controller is unable to manage the voltage once the sun is up for a small window of time. About 9am... This is causing voltage spikes and disconnecting the batteries. After about 10 minutes of intermittent power problems, everything works fine.I thought the controller is supposed to regulate the voltage to the absorption setting.
If you are talking Victron equipment that the phone app allows you to configure via Bluetooth. It has a bunch of different battery profiles and custom settings. Are you using lead-acid setting with LiFePO4 type battery? It does have a battery profile for LiFePO4...