I have a Multiplus 5000 connected to a 48V LFP battery bank with 860Ah. The MP is on FW 500 and is connected via a MK3 adapter to a Pi running Venus OS 3.00-8. The system is purely off-grid and has 4 MPPTs for DC coupling which do all the charging (MP charger is deactivated).
DVCC is set with Limit Charge Current and SVS activated.
The MPPTs and Smart Shunt are also in the Victron Smart Bluetooth Network (not sure if this clashes with the DVCC. Info out there is not clear, but the system is running fine with both enabled and configured).
I have also two (the same) assistants installed and configured to start a 'generator' (which is in fact a Phoenix inverter). The rules kick in when the MP is under heavy load and the 3KVA Phoenix provides an additional 2kW of AC input for the MP, just like a gen would. This all works fine since the installation.
Here is the problem:
I deliberately ran the battery down to test out the low voltage behaviour of the whole system.
The Settings for the MP are as following:
DC input low shut down: 37.2V
DC input low restart: 43.6V
DC input low pre-alarm: 43.6V
(I set low voltage disconnect that low on purpose as I don't want the MP to shut down at all at the moment. This will be re-configured later.)
With a 2kW load connected, the MP shut down itself at 44V battery voltage. It showed a low battery light at the front. This was in the morning at 7am. At this time the MPPTs charged already with 1kW and could quickly rise the voltage of the battery again to over 50V charge voltage. Neither the BMS nor another DC connected inverter shut down, so the battery was low but not critical low in any way.
The MP did not start itself any more after the initial disconnect and still showed the Low Battery alarm at the front panel. When going into the MP through the remote console, it showed the actual DC voltage correctly, but under Alarm Status, it was showing an alarm for Low Battery Voltage.
Once the battery hit 50%SOC (~54.5V), I turned the MP off and on again which fixed the issue right away and it worked normally afterwards.
I was wondering why the MP did turn itself off in the first place but did not restart itself after the voltage in the system rose again. I would have 100% expected that. This is an extreme uncomfortable situation, knowing I would have been without power in a real scenario.
Thanks everyone.