It worked but only around 25v at the output, and the if 3845 has no pwm outputIn this case I would think that converter in post #8 would work supplying the 360Vdc
MisterBill2’s assertion is that even batteries of the same type are never truly identical. While a series of batteries of the same type may appear identical, there will inevitably be slight variations from one battery to another. These variations can manifest as slightly higher internal resistance in some batteries compared to others. Consequently, one battery may charge more quickly than another, while others may charge at a slower pace. Given the large number of batteries in a string, it is possible for certain sections to overcharge while others remain undercharged. Overcharging a battery can lead to a faster depletion of its capacity.They are the same
Actually, that kind of power will evaporate the wrench out of your hand! No Fun At ALL!!Interesting way to think of it - - - 360V x 100A = 36,000W. And that's DC voltage. Make contact with that and you're going to get a hugely serious burn. The biggest system I worked with was 32VDC @ 50Ah. Imagine all that amperage at once - - - 32V x 50A = 1,600W. The battery cabling on that system was around "Single Ot" gauge. And that's only 32 volts.
These are quite common. The 12/24 volts units have a transformer to step up the voltage, these units do not. The 360 volts is straight PWM'd to get a sine wave that feeds the load. The whole unit is floating and the isolation is in the 360 volts battery charger.360VDC ? ? ? Unlike any UPS I've ever dealt with. ALL mine have a 12V battery inside them. They sit on my desk tops. When power drops out the UPS Board switches to delivering the needed AC. In my case it's 120VAC. In your case 240VAC (or as some people refer to these voltages as 110 and 220 volts AC).
Here's what I know, which might not apply to your system if it truly needs 360VDC: Mains power (110 or 220) the UPS charges and keeps charged a 12 volt battery. When power fails or is interrupted the UPS almost instantaneously switches to backup battery power inverting 12 volts DC into (in my case) 120 volts AC and supports the computer and anything else I have plugged into the UPS.
The batteries are connected to a charging board not directly to 360 volts.This may be a repeated warning, but charging a sting of batteries to anything close to 360 volts presents not only a shock hazard,
The picture you posted is more like the inverter part of the UPS.Hello everyone here, greetings for all
Well, I have this UPS battery charger board, " this is one is broken and I'm working on fix, but I just show here for understanding" View attachment 340790normally it's installed in UPS machine, 20kva capacity, and 3.5A charging capacity
What I need do, is to take this board outside the UPS and charge the batteries
It takes DC in plus/minus which is I think it's the DC bus in UPS
and output DC plus/minus for batteries terminals
I need power by electric cable from 220v ac, 50 Hz,
What I know is that I need approximately 360v dc at input and that's all
What are your ideas for get 360v dc to power this charger?, hopefully with a range of 300-360v
Regards
View attachment 340789
btw:
hello my friends , here is edit to the post for more clarification for what i need
View attachment 341412
ive tried to put as much details as i can so you can have better view and understanding for the board, and you can see above the on/off socket, and charger detect socket,
normally these two sockets are connected to another board in the UPS , for turning on and off the battery charger and for detecting the batteries voltage " 16 battery in series " " 16*12v = 192v "
what i want to do is to power on that board without connecting to the other board in UPS
here is more information :
View attachment 341413
here also :
View attachment 341414
how can i power this board?
regards
For about 1hr, we will use for just raising battaries voltage a little bit upSo there is a question: How often does it need to supply power, and for how long at a time.
Your system design may have become simple and easy!!
No it's a DC-dc converter used for charging battaries in UPSThe picture you posted is more like the inverter part of the UPS.
It's working, but I want to use outside the UPS, so it not work and I need to make it workIF that DC to DC converter is working, just what is the problem??