I’ve been looking for a simple low-voltage cutoff circuit for a 12v SLA battery, but many of the ones I find have reviews saying that the protection circuit itself drains the battery slowly as well. Is this just inherent in the design, where it has to draw a little to measure the voltage, or are there low-voltage cutoffs that don’t draw anything until the battery is recharged?

  • Susan_B_Good@discuss.tchncs.de
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    1 year ago

    You want hysteresis and an energy gap - which means putting energy into the system. You could use a latching relay to minimise insertion loss, however the loss in a conducting MOSFET can be pretty minimal.

    SLAs self-discharge, of course.

    If the load versus time is predictable, you could use a latching relay and delay voltage checking until the time window for potential cut-off. Or make it entirely period based and not test at all.

    It may be that you never need to sense voltage, if your time period between recharging is small enough.

    Many operate on that basis - the time interval between recharging may be out of their control (in our case, once, we only had mains electricity between 2am and 4 am each day…) and they provide themselves with enough battery capacity to last that time interval, with a reserve. So no low voltage cut off necessary. So no testing necessary.