Very cool Doc. I love that you have enough toys in your basement to just go hook something up and try it : D
One question. The Delta-Q says 85-265V AC input. That's RMS AC voltage, so the minimum voltage the Delta-Q expects is really 120V AC peak, or 240V peak to peak. You're driving it with 90V DC and it seems to work fine.. is there any way to estimate an appropriate DC voltage range for the charger based upon its input AC voltage requirements? Or just test?
Yes i have "few" toys in my garage
.. 2x zero DS 2010 for parts and my DS 2011 Plus my 113kmh Giant electric DH bicycle, my drag racing and drift E-trike and a great lab for battery testing and building!
I have not showed that in the video but i was able to drop the voltage as low as 85V DC wich is the same for the AC low limit. below that the charger goes in error and stop working.
since it's a switching power supply with CC-CV at the output, as you decrease the voltage at the input as it will try to raise the current to keep the same input and output wattage.
ONe next thing i could try is to find the internal current sensing shunt of the delta Q and play with the detected sensing mV value with a voltage divider and lower the current to have the delta Q to operate also at lower power to accomodate solar charging to avoid the need of 10 square meter of solar pannel to trigger the charger ON !