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4250 Flow Meter
Section 1 Introduction
1-13
1.9 How to Make Battery
Calculations
To calculate battery life expectancy for an installation, you must
know two things:
• The capacity of the battery you are using
• The average current draw of the flow meter or (other
device) powered.
Battery capacity is expressed in ampere-hours. The battery man-
ufacturer provides this information for each battery. This value is
the product of a load current times an arbitrary time period: ten
hours for nickel-cadmium batteries, and twenty hours for
lead-acid types. The terminal voltage of the battery at the end of
this time period is the discharged cell voltage, 10 volts for
nickel-cadmium and 10.5 volts for lead-acid types.
Batteries are
fully discharged well before the terminal voltage drops to
zero volts.
I s c o b a t t e r i e s a r e r a t e d a t
4 a m p e r e - h o u r s
f o r t h e
nickel-cadmium and
6.5 ampere-hours
for lead-acid types.
Convert the battery current capacity into milliamperes and then
divide this figure by the average current drawn by the unit. This
will give you a number in hours. Divide that figure by 24, and
you will have the number of days.
The published ampere-hour figures do not mean that you can
expect to draw 4 amperes from the nickel-cadmium battery (or
6.5 amperes from the lead-acid battery) for one hour. At the
one-hour rate, discharges are typically less than half the ten- or
twenty-hour rate.
To convert ampere-hours to milliamperes, multiply by 1,000.
Examples:
4 ampere-hours × 1,000 = 4,000 mAh
6.5 ampere-hours × 1,000 = 6,500 mAh
If you divide this figure by the average current of the flow meter,
say 15 mA, you will have:
4,000 ÷ 15 = 266.67 hours
Divide this number by twenty-four to get days:
266.67 hours ÷ 24 = 11.1 days
For considerations of safety, we suggest you subtract 10% from
this number (100% – 5% for 95% capacity and 5% for a reserve at
the end of discharge).
11.1 – 1.1 = 10 days
This is the battery expectancy for a nickel-cadmium battery with
a 15 mA continuous average drain, with a 10% derating factor.
You can use the same method to calculate for lead-acid batteries,
except the current will be 6,500 mA, and the period correspond-
ingly longer, in this case a little over 16 days. You can run the full
number of days calculated without derating if your batteries are
new and at 100% capacity, but you will leave yourself no safety
factor if you are in error on either of these assumptions.
Remember, if the battery fails, there will be a period of time
during which no measurements will be taken, (and no data
stored, if you are also using FLOWLINK® software).
Summary of Contents for 4250
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Page 12: ...4250 Flow Meter Table of Contents x ...
Page 28: ...4250 Flow Meter Section 1 Introduction 1 16 ...
Page 90: ...4250 Flow Meter Section 2 Programming 2 62 ...
Page 140: ...4250 Flow Meter Section 4 Options and Accessories 4 30 ...
Page 160: ...4250 Flow Meter Appendix A Replacement Parts and Accessories A 2 ...
Page 161: ...4250 Flow Meter Appendix A Replacement Parts and Accessories A 3 ...
Page 166: ...4250 Flow Meter Appendix A Replacement Parts and Accessories A 8 ...
Page 184: ...4250 Flow Meter Appendix C General Safety Procedures C 10 ...
Page 191: ...4250 Flow Meter Appendix D Material Safety Data Sheets D 7 ...
Page 192: ...4250 Flow Meter Appendix D Material Safety Data Sheets D 8 ...
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