Thanks Matthew, that helps.
I'm an electrician by trade but solar is a new field to me.
Here's what I'm trying to achieve.
I have a van with a tent box on top, bikes travel inside. No leisure battery just a 40w panel to keep vehicle battery up so I can use radio and leds whilst parked. At the mo use electric hook up to charge bikes but it's not always available.
So, having looked at the Elejoy spec, it seems I can set this to 41-41.5 or 42 v, and connect it to the normal charge port on my batteries so the battery bms would balance and limit charge as usual. Is that right?
The Elejoy would deliver constant current up to set voltage than switch to mA constant voltage. Is that right?
I'm guessing I would need a bigger solar panel but the 40w will do to test feasability.
Our two bikes have 3 batteries between them amounting to some 46Ah in total. We never run them flat (or at least not yet) 'cos our legs and bums give up before that happens.
The Elejoy spec claims 97% efficiency which seems really good, so going at it this way avoids the charger and inverter inefficiencies. What's not to like? So this might work with a days riding followed by a day resting/walking whilst the batteries charge.
Do the numbers stack up? I would have a concern that there is some safety issue I'm not aware of. Reverse feed possibility? Overcharging if left connected whilst out walking?
I know enough about electricity to be circumspect and D.C. in particular needs careful handling even at sub 50v.
Assuming generic batteries, not Shimano/Bosch etc first of all.
Yes, if you set the Elejoy to full battery voltage, you should be able to charge through the charge port, and so have full BMS protection.
I prefer to charge a bit below, 41V for my 36V bike, and I found my BMS didn't like that, and would not accept charge sometimes. So for knowing it will always charge, and trusting the Elejoy to stop at 41V and then current limit until full, I am charging via the output port. This is one of those things to find out and understand before depending on it.
Overcharging risk is always there, you need to form an opinion of how great it is, and consequences, and if need be have a second means of disconnecting if something is not right. On the road, I don't.
The Elejoy does not care how much current it stuffs into the battery. Just now I had 8 amps from my 330Wp array, into battery at 38V. So panel size vs battery capacity is the way to control maximum charge current. My solar battery is only 13Ah. I'll do a capacity test when I'm home to see how much this pretty concentrated use affects it.
Take the 97% efficiency claim with a pinch of salt. There are two efficiencies involved: the DC/DC conversion and the quality of the MPPT tracking algorithm. They are not always clear what is meant!
Your use case is perfect. I can say from my trip so far, you can expect at least 2Wh per Wp of panel on a fairly overcast day, rising to more than 6, maybe even 8 or 9, on a blue sky day from an unshaden horizontal panel.
Start with your 40W, but you will probably want to go somewhat bigger.