Hi, I'm a filmmaker and while many filmmakers are kinda obsessed with sony NPF batteries I am on the extreme end, trying my DIY best to make them do everything (I know they can't really but it's fun trying!)
Anyway the highest realistic capacity one can expect from something like this sony NPF battery is 44Wh at 7.4V about 6A max current (though many claim more). So I assumed if I put two in series and then put that 14V pair in parallel with another two I could get ~15V and 12A or 176Wh and a max 176W.
To stress test this I got a 500W AC inverter (extra to be safe). When I tested the batteries directly to the inverter I triggered the overvoltage on the inverter which is set at 15V and my fresh batteries were putting out 16V (so close). So then I bought this buck converter to bring it down. I set the max voltage to 15V and the max current to be as high as possible (12A) which hypothetically limits me to 180W which should be fine.
I ran this new 4NPFs -> buck converter -> AC inverter -> and plugged in a high powered 250W LED into this watt metered plug into the inverter. The LED light has a dimmer so I could test various watt draw. I started low and the light came on! I ramped up the watt draw until it hit 90W at which point I noticed the buck converter was showing 9A and the voltage was now dropping to 11.2V at which point the AC inverter's low voltage trigger went off and shut things down.
So I expected my janky setup to have some legit efficiency issues but 90W vs 180W is much worse than I thought. Even with the buck converter's %98 efficiency (180W x .98 = 174W) and the AC inverter's %86 efficiency (174W x .86 = 150W) I'm thinking I should be able to squeeze out at least another 50W.
So I have come to you fine folks to see if we can increase this NPF to AC efficiency. I guess I don't exactly know enough about battery science to know why the voltage drops so significantly and if that's the unfixable part of my system? Maybe these batteries just have an inevitable issue as having high internal resistance?
What do you think, are you unsurprised at my result? Do you think I've hit the ceiling with NPF>AC output? Can we do better?
Thanks so much!
Anyway the highest realistic capacity one can expect from something like this sony NPF battery is 44Wh at 7.4V about 6A max current (though many claim more). So I assumed if I put two in series and then put that 14V pair in parallel with another two I could get ~15V and 12A or 176Wh and a max 176W.
To stress test this I got a 500W AC inverter (extra to be safe). When I tested the batteries directly to the inverter I triggered the overvoltage on the inverter which is set at 15V and my fresh batteries were putting out 16V (so close). So then I bought this buck converter to bring it down. I set the max voltage to 15V and the max current to be as high as possible (12A) which hypothetically limits me to 180W which should be fine.
I ran this new 4NPFs -> buck converter -> AC inverter -> and plugged in a high powered 250W LED into this watt metered plug into the inverter. The LED light has a dimmer so I could test various watt draw. I started low and the light came on! I ramped up the watt draw until it hit 90W at which point I noticed the buck converter was showing 9A and the voltage was now dropping to 11.2V at which point the AC inverter's low voltage trigger went off and shut things down.
So I expected my janky setup to have some legit efficiency issues but 90W vs 180W is much worse than I thought. Even with the buck converter's %98 efficiency (180W x .98 = 174W) and the AC inverter's %86 efficiency (174W x .86 = 150W) I'm thinking I should be able to squeeze out at least another 50W.
So I have come to you fine folks to see if we can increase this NPF to AC efficiency. I guess I don't exactly know enough about battery science to know why the voltage drops so significantly and if that's the unfixable part of my system? Maybe these batteries just have an inevitable issue as having high internal resistance?
What do you think, are you unsurprised at my result? Do you think I've hit the ceiling with NPF>AC output? Can we do better?
Thanks so much!