marmott2334 Posted May 7 Posted May 7 HI All, I have PV panels which were installed in 2014. I am considering installing battery storage, but I have a number of questions...... What is the life span of the batteries? I have been quoted LPF batteries. Are these batteries recyclable? What would the cost of having these batteries replaced be? I know it is a difficult question to answer as it would be at least 10-15 years from now, but I am just wondering if the replacement cost of the batteries would be similar to the initial cost?
ToughButterCup Posted May 7 Posted May 7 1 hour ago, marmott2334 said: ... What is the life span of the batteries? I have been quoted LPF batteries. .. Welcome. Life-span? What have the manufacturers / installer claimed the life-span to be ?
Bancroft Posted May 7 Posted May 7 1 hour ago, marmott2334 said: What is the life span of the batteries? Car EV batteries are generally said to decay by 1% per year so I would have thought that would be a good figure to start with. Recycling? I asked this question to a friend who is in the EV car world and he said yes. There is a cascade of ways they get re-used (eg they go from car to static storage, then to less important storage facilities etc until finally broken apart for parts) and I imagine that the options for re-use and re-cycling is only going to grow. Costs generally seem to be coming down - at the same time as efficiency is going up. So the chances are in the future you'll probably pay the same cost but have something 2-3 times more efficient.
Nickfromwales Posted May 7 Posted May 7 Solarwatt are offering a guaranteed 80% minimum capacity at year 12. About as good as it gets. Also, afaik, they’re the same cells that they’re using in the cars (Solarwatt is owned by the folk who own BMW) so should be very robust. Any manufacturer should have a statement for recycling / end of life practices etc so just ask whoever you decide to go with for their info / policies.
SteamyTea Posted May 7 Posted May 7 34 minutes ago, Nickfromwales said: Solarwatt are offering a guaranteed 80% minimum capacity at year 12. About as good as it gets. Is there any mention of charge/discharge percentage and the total number of cycles?
Nickfromwales Posted May 7 Posted May 7 53 minutes ago, SteamyTea said: Is there any mention of charge/discharge percentage and the total number of cycles? Unlimited throughput, rest of info I will try and link in a bit I've got the bumf just need to find it in the mountain of emails I have!
JohnMo Posted May 7 Posted May 7 3 hours ago, marmott2334 said: What is the life span of the batteries? Really depends on how many times you cycle the battery, if charge and discharge 3 times a day, the batteries likely to last 1/3 as long compared to a battery charged discharged once a day. Laptop and phone start off great, the longer you keep them, the worse they get for battery life. No You really need to assess your life style, energy and usage patterns. A battery makes great use of excess PV and it's great for any time of use tariff. We are on just E7 and our average cost per kWh in March and April was 5p. So based on our usage we save £150 by having battery and PV in one month. This year so far is just over £500 saved. 10 years time, would hope battery technology has moved well past current tech, so who knows the price. My first flat screen TV was £6k, similar now £200.
Nickfromwales Posted May 7 Posted May 7 1 hour ago, JohnMo said: My first flat screen TV was £6k, We all needed our heads examining....lol....as my 1st 42" plasma was £4-figures too. (I'm too embarrassed to say what I paid for it ), died pretty quickly and was buried at sea
JohnMo Posted May 7 Posted May 7 10 minutes ago, Nickfromwales said: We all needed our heads examining....lol....as my 1st 42" plasma was £4-figures too. (I'm too embarrassed to say what I paid for it ), died pretty quickly and was buried at sea Still have ours - not been switched on for a few years. But being plasma I could possibly heat the house with it.
Nickfromwales Posted May 7 Posted May 7 20 minutes ago, SteamyTea said: Instead don't have a TV, 31 years without one now. Are you a mad cat lady?
SteamyTea Posted May 7 Posted May 7 3 minutes ago, Nickfromwales said: you a mad cat lady No, just realised that you could download porn via the internet, on demand. Oh how I miss dialing up a Nigerian number on my old 9600 baud modem.
Nickfromwales Posted May 7 Posted May 7 Another unpredictable digression. We’re a diverse forum., if nothing else 🙃
SteamyTea Posted May 7 Posted May 7 1 minute ago, Nickfromwales said: We’re a diverse forum As long as we don't get Reform involved, we can be as diverse as we like.
Nickfromwales Posted May 7 Posted May 7 11 minutes ago, SteamyTea said: As long as we don't get Reform involved, we can be as diverse as we like. Or just lock you in the cooler with pocster.....
SteamyTea Posted May 7 Posted May 7 18 minutes ago, Nickfromwales said: Or just lock you in the cooler with pocster..... @Pocster shrivels to a walnut when he is not in the West Undies blazing sunshine. 1
marmott2334 Posted May 8 Author Posted May 8 On 07/05/2025 at 11:23, ToughButterCup said: Welcome. Life-span? What have the manufacturers / installer claimed the life-span to be ? They give a 15 year guarantee. That is the biggest one that I have seen. Others are about 10 years. I'm guessing that the batteries should last at least 15 years, perhaps 15-20 years?? 1
joth Posted May 8 Posted May 8 1 hour ago, marmott2334 said: They give a 15 year guarantee. That is the biggest one that I have seen. Others are about 10 years. I'm guessing that the batteries should last at least 15 years, perhaps 15-20 years?? Lifespan will be much more than this 10-15 years, it's just the capacity reduces. (Same as PV the peak power degrades over time). So a 10 year guarantee normally guarantees something like 90% capacity remaining. I expect the 15 year guarantee wording says 85% capacity remaining. If you have space and dno approval it makes more sense to plan to add additional battery in a decade or whenever, rather than replace.
scottishjohn Posted Tuesday at 08:03 Posted Tuesday at 08:03 (edited) giv energy batteries have a 15years warranty worth a look made in uk Edited Tuesday at 08:04 by scottishjohn
Bancroft Posted Tuesday at 08:51 Posted Tuesday at 08:51 On 07/05/2025 at 14:03, JohnMo said: My first flat screen TV was £6k Back in the mid-eighties, I saw an advert for a 1Tb hard drive for a computer. I remeber thinking two thoughts: Who on earth would need that amount of data on a hard drive, and Who would pay £6000 for a hard drive?
JohnMo Posted Tuesday at 08:56 Posted Tuesday at 08:56 51 minutes ago, scottishjohn said: giv energy batteries have a 15years warranty worth a look made in uk Mine was installed 2 days before they changed from 10 years to 15 years
Tetrarch Posted Tuesday at 09:05 Posted Tuesday at 09:05 I'll see your 1TB in the 80's....... In 1956, IBM’s Data Processing Division in southern San Jose, Ca transported the first hard-drive that only held a whopping 5 megabytes of storage Regards Tet
joth Posted Tuesday at 09:49 Posted Tuesday at 09:49 (edited) 1 hour ago, Bancroft said: Back in the mid-eighties, I saw an advert for a 1Tb hard drive for a computer. I remeber thinking two thoughts: Who on earth would need that amount of data on a hard drive, and Who would pay £6000 for a hard drive? I doubt this very much. 1GB would have cost about $1M in 1985, so 1TB would be more like 1 billion dollars. (Or $100M for 1Tb if you mean bits not bytes - not conventional*). https://humanprogress.org/dataset/average-cost-of-hard-drive-storage-per-gigabyte £6000 would have maybe get you 10 MB mid 80s. In the early 90s I paid £200 for 20MB hard drive - £6000 would have bought about 600 MB. By the end of the 90s I paid about £150 for 4Gb - so £6000 would have got 160GB. It's almost the mid-noughties before £6000 would purchase 1TB - around the time I started working for Google which is where I first started hearing TB referred to in casual conversation. So off topic.... * - of course we should be using MiB GiB and TiB for storage, not MB GB TB but honestly that never caught on did it. Edited Tuesday at 09:58 by joth 1
Bancroft Posted Tuesday at 14:19 Posted Tuesday at 14:19 4 hours ago, joth said: I doubt this very much I'm certain I saw the ad as it appeared in the magazine month after month. But, I will acknowledge that my TB and GB might have got mixed up over time (memory not what it used to be - if you'll pardon the pun). 1
joth Posted Tuesday at 15:48 Posted Tuesday at 15:48 An advert for 1GB in early to mid -90s is very plausible. My first PC in 1995 had a 1GB HDD... that was my second hard drive, just a few years after purchasing that 20 MB drive for my Amiga. A period of insane growth, bit like AI expansion is now.
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now