How Precharge Resistors Work in Battery Energy Storage Systems

April 18, 2026

In a battery energy storage system (BESS), system startup is not simply a matter of closing the main circuit.

When the battery connects to the inverter, power conversion system (PCS), or a large DC bus, the large capacitors inside the system will instantly draw a large amount of current. Without current limiting, this inrush current can far exceed normal operating current, placing stress on relays, connectors, and power devices.

That's why precharge resistors exist.

What's a Precharge Resistor?

A precharge resistor is basically a current-limiting component that sits in series with the main circuit.

 

Before the main contactor closes all the way, the system sends current through the precharge circuit and resistor. This gradually charges up the bus capacitors so their voltage gets close to the battery voltage.

 

Once the voltage difference between the two sides drops into a safe range, the main contactor closes, bypasses the resistor, and the system moves into normal operation.

Key functions of the precharge resistor:

Limits inrush current during startup

Protects the main contactor contacts

Reduce stress on capacitors

Improves system stability during power-up

Why Inrush Current Matters?

High-power DC inputs typically include large filter capacitors.

 

If the main contactor closes directly, the instantaneous current is theoretically limited only by the total impedance of the circuit. Since the circuit impedance is usually very low, the current peak can reach hundreds of amps or even higher.

This can lead to:

Corrosion of contactor contacts

Fatigue of solder joints

False alarms from the battery management system (BMS)

Triggering of inverter input protection

Typical Precharge Sequence in Battery Systems

Standard precharge logic usually involves three steps:

Step 1: Close the precharge relay

The precharge relay closes first, allowing current to flow through the precharge resistor to the load side.

Step 2: Monitor bus voltage rise

The DC bus voltage is monitored. When the bus voltage reaches a set percentage (for example, 90%–95% of the battery voltage), the capacitors are considered sufficiently charged.

Step 3: Close the main relay and bypass the resistor

The main relay closes, and the system enters normal conduction mode.

If the voltage does not reach the target value within the specified time, the precharge is considered a failure.

Common Failure Modes

Common issues with precharge circuits include:

Resistor open circuit → Precharge cannot complete

Resistor value drift → Abnormal precharge time

Relay stuck → Main circuit closes abnormally

Voltage sensing error → Main relay switches too early

These failures usually don't happen right away. Instead, they show up as occasional field failures, and troubleshooting can be both time‑consuming and expensive.

Although a precharge resistor may seem like a small component, it determines whether the system can start up successfully the first time.

 

In battery energy storage systems, many reliability issues happen in an instant, and the precharge resistor is the key component that controls that very moment.

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