Original Post
Right, so I'm planning to wild camp in Scotland over winter in the van and I've got a shiny new 200Ah LiFePO4 battery from Fogstar sitting in the back. Currently running a Victron MPPT 100/30 and a Renogy 400W solar panel, but I'm a bit concerned about charging when it's brass monkeys outside.
I know LiFePO4 are generally hardier than lead-acid, but I'm seeing conflicting info online — some say you can charge down to -20°C, others reckon you'll brick the cells if you go below 0°C. My BMS has built-in low-temp protection, so it supposedly cuts off charging when things get dodgy, but I'm wondering if that's actually reliable or if I'm about to become an expensive cautionary tale on the forum.
The van's got a bit of insulation and I'm planning to heat the battery compartment with a small 12V heater when temps drop, but I want to know if that's overkill or essential.
My questions:
- What's the actual minimum temp for safe charging?
- Will the BMS protection work reliably, or should I supplement it?
- Is the heating approach sensible or am I overthinking this?
Cheers in advance — don't fancy explaining to my missus how I've turned a grand's worth of lithium into an expensive paperweight.