MEXICOWANDERER wrote:
Uh partner, me hates to tell you this but an electrical engineering degree is a mere single component needed to make an individual an authority on batteries. A chemical engineering degrer is also mandatory then the two disciplines have to be melded with oh, say, several decades of practical experience actually working with genuine live batteries. It also helps to have some decades of experience working around yachts, RVs and alternative energy.
An ability to shovel coal does not make one a locomotive engineer.
Also, being an authority on batteries doesn't require a rocket science degree, because understanding what makes sense for batteries isn't rocket science ... and it probably could take decades of practical experience to realize that. ;)