Quick update clarification on this. Battery reached 99% SOC, then it went into "trickle charge" for a couple of minutes to 100%. Then contactor started cycling for~5min. I'm not sure when above table was a reflection of.
I used the car, to 83% then did another data grab and it showed delta of < 10mV Min to max in line with my other battery experience. (CALB 230Ahr boat batteries. LiFePO4 4S2P 2x bms, very configurable)
Next 100% charge I will do multiple grabs as it is balancing. Unless C. scanner does real time graphs until unplugged.
which I doubt for a free app.
Edit: What I really want to understand is the mode of balancing as my house install is capacitive and doesn't require external power. Just linking high cell to low cell in parallel.,
sequentially. until it averages out. Is this passive?
BTW, the clacking contactors is the MG way of deciding that the battery is 100%, according to MG tech's. somewhat primitive I would have thought?
Too much to learn, too little time. The reason I need to know, is there is no "help" readily available 100's of miles offshore.
The SOC % is meaningless until all the cells are 3.5V or higher. All the 100% is saying is it sees the voltage it expects to see when 100% SOC, or it is a tad out of wack as far as calibration and has not accurately counted the energy out V energy in, and thinks more has come in than actually has, or hasn't recorded some of what went out.
The last one is common if the cell voltage monitor doesn't take the battery negative from the load side of the energy counting shunt, it doesn't see the energy the monitor takes to power itself being drawn out of the battery, so it doesn't get recorded.
The battery is only at 100% SOC when all the cells are above 3.5V, if any cell isn't above 3.5V then the battery isn't fully charged.
Two methods of cell balancing:
If only 1 cell group is low, a single 3.6V charger powered by the inverter will use energy from the whole pack and feed it into the low cell the charger is connected across. Leave the full battery charging system running while this balancing is taking place ..... if the other cells drop below 3.5V, you now have no idea what is fully charged, you could end up with the cell you are trying to bring up to the same voltage as the other becoming the high voltage cell once a full battery charge takes place, the cell you are trying to bring up might only need a few Ah to get the voltage up, put too many Ah in and that cell will reach 100% SOC before the others, creating the opposite problem to the one you were trying to fix .....
The second method is loading the high cell/s. A 50W halogen bulb with a two wires soldered on to the bulb terminals and an alligator clip on each lead, Connect the alligator clips across the positive and negative of the high voltage cell, not the whole battery pack, this will drain some capacity out of that cell only, while the others are still charging .... basically a high resistance load that you can see and turn on/off as required ... as an example, the whole battery pack is charging at 5 amps, the light globe is drawing that 5 amps out of the high cell only, so the other cells can catch up.
If you have up to 4 cells in series, that are all high voltage, you can connect the 12V bulb across the negative on one end of the group, and the positive on the other end of the high voltage cell group. This will waste charging current out of the 4 cells in series, will the other cells are still getting charged.
Once you get the battery close to fully balanced at 100% SOC, all the cells above 3.5V, the permanently connected balancer will most likely be able to keep the cells balanced.
T1 Terry