How Many Amp Hours Are in 3.2 MJ?

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The discussion centers on calculating the amp hours available from a 3.2 MJ battery system used in directional drilling, where battery failure can lead to significant costs. The motor idles at 1300 J/H, while equipment pulses consume 1282 J every 6 seconds, prompting the need for a formula to determine when to replace or recharge the batteries. A suggested calculation shows that the estimated run time is approximately 4 hours and 9 minutes, factoring in both idle and pulse consumption. Participants recommend establishing a regular battery replacement schedule to mitigate the risk of costly failures. Overall, implementing a proactive maintenance strategy is emphasized as a practical solution.
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I just met a fellow who works in directional drilling. He has a problem when his dry cell lithium ion batteries die. It costs him $300,000 when it happens. What he needs to know is when to pull the batteries BEFORE this happens. These Double D cell batteries when connected, hold their 36 volts until the 3.2MJ are used up, then he gets an estimated .2 millivolt instantly.
I told him I knew a site that could tell us that for him.

SO...here is the question. He starts out with 3.2 MJ...the motor requires 1300 J/H to idle...pulses from his equipment cost 1282J every 6 seconds. How many amp hours does he have before it costs him? When should he pull the batteries for replacement or charge?

Is there a formula for this we can give him?

My personal interpretation of this equation is to mutiply the J/6 sec into hours and add to the hourly cost. Then divide into the 3.2 MJ for a time allowance. That was not his question though. Any takers?
 
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Welcome to PF, Djkwolf.
I'm afraid that I can't help with your solution, but there are others here who can. I don't know what time zone you're in. It's coming up on 2:30 am here, and most respondents are in North America, so it might be a while before someone else gets back to you.
Now, I'm going to bed.
 
Thanks Danger!
I AM in Alberta, and it WAS after 2am that I posted.
 
djkwolf said:
I just met a fellow who works in directional drilling. He has a problem when his dry cell lithium ion batteries die. It costs him $300,000 when it happens. What he needs to know is when to pull the batteries BEFORE this happens. These Double D cell batteries when connected, hold their 36 volts until the 3.2MJ are used up, then he gets an estimated .2 millivolt instantly.
I told him I knew a site that could tell us that for him.

SO...here is the question. He starts out with 3.2 MJ...the motor requires 1300 J/H to idle...pulses from his equipment cost 1282J every 6 seconds. How many amp hours does he have before it costs him? When should he pull the batteries for replacement or charge?

Is there a formula for this we can give him?

My personal interpretation of this equation is to mutiply the J/6 sec into hours and add to the hourly cost. Then divide into the 3.2 MJ for a time allowance. That was not his question though. Any takers?


I'll take a stab at it, but I'm no electrical engineer. It appears to be all unit cancellation.

So first, covert all of your units so they're the same. So:
3.2 MJ = 3,200,000J
1282J/6s = 769,200J/h

Then you solution should be J/(J/h) = h
So your estimated run time should be:
3,200,000J / (1300J/h + 769,200J/h) = 4.15h = 4h 9m 11s

I hope this helps.
 
Perhaps he should invest in a totalising power meter.
 
since you are saying 'pulses', it would be prudent to have a safety margin ... what exactly do you mean by pulses per six seconds. is it a discharge or flash of some kind ?
 
Pulse was his word. His equipment reads every six seconds using battery power, and sends that data costing battery power.
 
He must know what his average usage time is.

If he replaces the batteries every 2 weeks, why not change them every 10 days regardless of condition? Set up a schedule and have someone assigned to do it.

Considering the consequences of getting it wrong, wasting a few dollars on batteries that still have a bit of life in them is trivial.
 
vk6kro said:
He must know what his average usage time is.

If he replaces the batteries every 2 weeks, why not change them every 10 days regardless of condition? Set up a schedule and have someone assigned to do it.

Considering the consequences of getting it wrong, wasting a few dollars on batteries that still have a bit of life in them is trivial.

Indeed, I'd approach this problem empirically and use some statistics to put a TPM programme in place.
 
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