Robert H. Wilkinson
New member
An interesting article on your insurance and installing lithium batteries.
https://marineindustrynews.co.uk/insura ... 1O6DO-qOzs
https://marineindustrynews.co.uk/insura ... 1O6DO-qOzs
thataway":br636pwr said:Unfortunately the author didn't understand the different chemistries and the risks with each. Read the "comments" for more accurate information.
"Meddle not with the issues of the dragon, for you are crunchy, and taste good with catsup."
In general, lithium iron phosphate batteries do not explode or ignite. LiFePO4 batteries are safer in normal use, but they are not absolute and can be dangerous in some extreme cases. It is related to the company's decisions of material selection, ratio, process and later uses.
….the possibility of short-circuiting from materials and batteries is inherent.
Elemental iron can cause the micro-short circuit of the battery, which is the most taboo substance in the battery. This is one of the main reasons why Japan does not apply LiFePO4 to the powerful lithium-ion battery.
an omission, corrected by the following, which increases our understanding, somewhat, of these newer suppliers of POWER.Foggy":u5k6gqbe said:.....
NMC battery: older, fewer charge cycles
LFP battery: newer, safer, many more charge cycles
.....
Aye.
Lithium-ion (NMC) has a higher energy density at 150/200 Wh/kg versus lithium iron phosphate at 90/120 Wh/kg. So, lithium-ion is normally the go-to source for power hungry electronics that drain batteries at a high rate.