Problem: Frequent Brownouts - Solution: DIY Small Backup Power System

in backup •  11 months ago  (edited)

During my treadmill workout - and of course, earning multiple crypto tokens, I did some online shopping and ordered the components for my next project: DIY Small Backup Power System.

The system's main job will be powering small appliances and charging various personal devices during the annoyingly frequent "brownouts" (Grid-wide, electrical shutdowns) plaguing most countries in Asia.

[Can you say, "Poorly maintained, outdated and overloaded infrastructure?"]

Anyway, back on topic: Home Backup Power System.

The design is simple, easy to assemble, inexpensive and requires only 3 components:

  1. 12V 100Ah LifePo4 battery (built-in BMS)


Battery.jpeg

  1. 10A LifePO4 Smart Charger


charger.png

  1. DC to AC Pure Sine Inverter


inverter.png

System Capacity: 1,200 Wh (~1,045 Wh nominal); max continuous draw (load) is 500W, max peak burst load is 2000W - both are dictated by the specs of the Inverter.

Safety Note:

A 12V circuit cannot sustain a 2000W continuous load without resulting in some serious, oftentimes irreparable damage - mostly due to the 200 Amps' worth of heat that comes with a 2000W draw.

Better to go with a 24V system instead; same 2000W load becomes 100 Amps (less heat, thinner wires and well within system tolerances).

My Project's Total Cost: $250 - $265 (USD); at least half the price AND over double the capacity of pre-built consumer power stations.

Note: I decided to buy a standard-size 12V LifePO4 battery (similar to the size of a lead-acid car battery) instead of making one from multiple LifePO4 cells (e.g., 32650s, S168s, Prismatics, etc.).

That way, I'm avoiding the hassles of procuring additional components, performing pre-operational load balancing, wiring or bus-bar connecting the cells, attaching/testing the BMS and sizing a "rattle-free" enclosure.

Besides...

After doing the numbers, I found out that building a DIY 12V 100Ah LifePo4 battery vs. buying one outright yields little, if any, cost reductions.

Submitted FYI.

May you and yours be well and loving life today.

In Lak'ech,

JaiChai

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