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machineage avatar image
machineage asked

Hovercraft - Victron Lithium Battery?

Hi to all the LFP lovers in here!

So I have been looking into this, but would like to get opinions and gain further knowledge about what may be viable for my application.

I would like to install a LFP battery into my hovercraft, if possible. Currently the craft has a single 65Ah FLA. The weight saving of LFP would be an obvious, and welcome benefit. Of advantage too, would be the ability to take the battery to a lower DoD compared to the FLA, for when the engine is not running but power is being consumed for accessories (VHF / music!) etc. I would like to avoid the extra weight / complexity of an additional starter battery.

Some considerations:

1) Cranking current
The overall power drawn to start the engine I have consistently measured at no more than 202 amps. I understand it is inadvisable to regularly draw very large currents from lfp cells, which can degrade them over time, also assuming the BMS will allow it. However I see batteries of say 100Ah available now which are specified and able to supply a continuous discharge of 200 amps, with much higher discharge currents for a limited time. I see for example, the Victron LFP- Smart 12,8/100 has a maximum continuous discharge current of 200 amps. In my application, 202 amps would mostly (hopefully) be a matter of a couple of seconds. I would likely carry a lithium jump starter for backup.

2) Alternator suitability
The current alternator is a Bosch 85A unit with internal regulator. I am happy to replace this with a more suitable alternative + associated regulator / controller.

3) Voltage spike / load dump
I’ve read much about this, and the varying solutions (Sterling APD / TVS diodes). Main concerns appear to be from sailboat owners, where ancillary current draw is low? In my application, with the engine running, the absolute minimum current draw is 12 amps (fuel pump, ignition, ECM, instruments). So if the BMS decides enough is enough, would the resulting jump from whatever the battery was consuming down to 12A still cause an associated spike of concern?

4) Location
The battery in my application would be mounted inside the cabin, negating excessive heat issues associated with an engine compartment installation. I also have no plans (or desire) to run the craft in sub-zero temperatures! ❄️

Any thoughts and other considerations most welcome!

lithium.jpg


Lithium Battery
lithium.jpg (458.0 KiB)
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mvader (Victron Energy) avatar image mvader (Victron Energy) ♦♦ commented ·
Can’t help with the advice myself, but what a cool craft!
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seb71 avatar image seb71 commented ·

I would like to avoid the extra weight / complexity of an additional starter battery.

I don't think this is feasible. Basically you want the starter battery to be always full. In your case you can't even get out and push. :)

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2 Answers
snoobler avatar image
snoobler answered ·
  1. Important to determine your minimum voltage at cranking. Current is also a function of voltage. Lead-acid has a higher resistance and will see a much larger voltage drop than LFP. It might be worth experimenting with a couple of large lead-acid batteries to see if larger batteries have a lower voltage drop. A lower voltage drop will result in a lower peak current. I suspect a 100Ah LFP battery will have a notably less severe voltage drop. As such, it will likely see less than 200A. The gauge of your wires between the battery and the starter may also play a key role. They may need to be upgraded.
  2. If the alternator absorp voltage is < 14.6V, it's float is under 13.6V, and it can modulate its output to prevent overheat, it can likely be direct connected. Since this is a starter battery, it shouldn't need much charging between uses.
  3. I can't answer this in the context it was given. Note that the batteries need a separate BMS.
  4. Good.


IMHO Victron batteries are VERY expensive, and you're paying for features you don't need in this application.


There are LFP starter batteries, and you would likely get better value and performance with a targeted solution.


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klim8skeptic avatar image
klim8skeptic answered ·

Winston make drop in Lifepo4 batteries.

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snoobler avatar image snoobler commented ·
The 60Ah has a 3C (180A) rating with 10C (600A) for 6 seconds.



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