(01-07-2023, 05:13 PM)snorin2 Wrote: I am currently using an APC modified 120V sine wave UPS, with a internal sealed VRLA 9AHr battery, which will give me a few hours of AC upon a power outage, according to the Resmed "Batttery Guide".
ResMed recommends only using lead-acid deep cycle batteries in their Battery Guide. I'm wondering how you came to the conclusion above? A 9 amp-hour lead acid battery cannot be "fully" used up without major damage to the cells. (meaning, if you have a grid power outage, you're not going to be able to get anywhere near 9 hours at a 1.0 amp draw and still have a good battery afterwards. Why is that? Because even on deep cycle lead-acid batteries, for good battery life, you should not allow your battery to get much below a 70% charge (roughly 12.3 volts, open terminal). If you run a lead-acid battery down to 30 or 40% of charge, you'll greatly reduce or even destroy the capacity of the battery. Yes, you may be able to re-charge it and have it go back up to over 13 volts open-terminal, but an open-terminal reading is not the same as a reading done under load. That open-terminal reading gives you a false sense of security. You'd have to get a 12-volt load tester to get an accurate reading.
For this reason, I would never get the "minimum" amp-hour battery that you can get away with. You're not going to be happy with the result. Most of the people here who claim that their small amp-hour battery or UPS worked for them "just fine" have not FULLY tested their emergency setup. You might be able to get away with drawing down your lead-acid battery below a 50% charge for one night for instance-- and most people who say their system operated "just fine" by doing that-- those folks have NOT tried to do this more than one or two nights, for if they did, they would soon discover that their lead-acid battery had an extremely reduced capacity (meaning, they damaged their battery). Keep in mind, the only way to properly test your battery capacity is with a good load tester, not a simple volt meter or open-terminal battery tester. So it's easy to think you're okay, when in fact, you're not.
In addition, the amp-hour rating on a given battery is not necessarily the same thing across different brands or types of batteries. For instance, you can't simply say "This battery has a 100 amp-hour rating". Why? Because there are different methods used to measure amp-hours. You have to ask "Is that amp-hour rating for 15 minutes, 10 hours or 20 hours?" Battery manufactures can easily bamboozle the public by claiming their batteries have more capacity than another similar battery. The industry standard for lead-acid deep cycle batteries is to use the 20-hour rating when calculating amp-hour ratings. Make sure you understand the difference and the TRUE rating of your battery.
For good battery life, I'd recommend using a deep cycle lead-acid battery that is at least 3-4 times the "minimum" 20 hour amp-hour rating given in the Battery Guide for the desired run-time. That Battery Guide is your minimum baseline - a minimum for safe operation of your ResMed CPAP machine. It does not take into account the fact of potential damage to your battery if you discharge your lead-acid battery to low levels. In other words, they're only mainly concerned with how amp-hours affects their machine, not how such operation will affect your battery. Lithium-ion batteries can be discharged to very low levels and still be okay-- but that is NOT the case with lead-acid batteries, including lead-acid deep cycle batteries. In fact, if you look at the documentation from deep cycle battery manufacturers, they usually recommend you DO NOT allow your deep cycle battery to go much below 70% of full charge.
Personally, I use two 6-volt golf-cart deep cycle batteries hooked up in series, which raises the voltage to a 12-volt system. Each of my two batteries has a 105 amp-hour rating at the 20-hour rate, which, when in series, has the same 105 amp-hours system-wide. This system will allow me to use my AirSense 10 AutoSet (without a heated humidifier) for 2-3 nights without deep-discharging my batteries below the recommended levels. And, since my batteries are connected to my solar panels via a charge controller, they usually charge back up to 100% if there's any sun at all during the daytime, even on relatively overcast days. My batteries are similar to the name-brand Trojan brand golf cart batteries which come highly recommended by many Recreational Vehicle owners for instance.
Also keep in mind that leaving a live grid-powered lead-acid battery charger of any type (trickle or otherwise) on a battery that is actively powering a CPAP machine might very well damage your CPAP machine, unless your CPAP is designed for a wide range of voltages. The 14.5 volts pushed into the circuit via a grid-powered battery charger doesn't just "go into the battery". It goes everywhere the circuit goes, including your converter (if you use one) and CPAP machine if it can operate directly on DC power, assuming if it's on and attached to the battery. So it's very unwise to use a live, plugged-in battery charger with a 12-volt battery that's also powering a CPAP machine at the same time (attempting to use such an arrangement like an Uninterruptible Power Supply). If you attempt this, make absolutely sure both your CPAP and converter can handle voltage fluctuations, including the higher voltages associated with a grid-powered battery charger.
Bottom line in all this is:
1) It's best to use a lead-acid deep cycle battery to power CPAP off-grid (using a DC converter, rather than an DC-AC inverter, as mentioned by Red, above).
2) Never actively charge ANY battery (lead-acid, AGM, Lithium, or others) while at the same time powering your CPAP machine, unless it's UPS that's designed for that very function, or on a solar powered system with a good charge controller. But keep in mind, most household/home office UPS devices are woefully inadequate for powering CPAP for any length of time due to the low amp-hour rating of the batteries that go into UPS devices.
3) If you use a Lithium-ion battery, NEVER leave it plugged in and charging unattended (for fire safety).
4) While you can discharge a Lithium-based battery to lower levels, you cannot do that with a lead-acid battery often without damaging your battery.
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