xanld
Active member
So no, three batteries were installed by the installer and I'm looking to add a fourth. Thank you for raising the point about connections. This is hopefully the last thing I'm looking to get absolute clarity on before proceeding.Sounds like a plan, if running 4 x 3.3 batteries are you going to run two double battery cable runs? I seem to recall the cables are available with 2 batteries or 3 on a single connection to the inverter.
Have you already added any batteries to get it to its current status?
You're right that the existing three batteries connect together with an inline connection, and I can't simply add a fourth. The installer said that to add a fourth you connect with a junction box. Attached is a page from the manual which also confirms this.
The parallel battery cables are 16mm2 and they connect to a common inverter cable which is 25mm2. I was hoping there would be explicit spec in the instructions, or that the battery would be supplied with cables or that there would be an obvious cable pack available for this extension, but it appears that none of these things are true.
Nonetheless, it appears pretty clear that connecting four 16mm battery cables into the existing common 25mm cable to the inverter via a junction box is the way to go. Am I right that the load in these cables will not be any higher when I add a fourth battery, it will be the same charge/discharge current distributed across four batteries rather than three?
I was planning on using a couple of these 300A bus bars as junction boxes, one for positive and one for negative.
I am still waiting for advice from the battery supplier on this, but I believe all I need is the two bus bars and two extra 16mm2 cables with the radsok connectors, plus the data patch cable.
Any further advice or confirmation welcome.
Attachments
Last edited: