Forum Discussion
westend
Dec 20, 2013Explorer
Huntindog wrote:Ya, understood. Reminds me of a line in a Clint Eastwood movie, "He's a legend in his own mind..."westend wrote:X2.... He is wrong on so many points, that I wouldn't know where to start... And I really don't feel like writing that much.tplife wrote:Your assumptions about use and price is definitely flawed. The comparison is not accurate. I choose not to explain it, I'm pretty sure everyone knows.
RJsfishin, I paid $120.00 for my Optima vs. $80.00 for the Costco marine flooded battery, an extra investiment of $40.00 more for my example...and the AGM has far exceeded what I expected for a power source. AGMS are rated to last 2 to 3X longer than flooded batteries, at least according to a lot of their customers. There are too many advantages to list here, but like pre-'75 cars, folks cling to what they know and love rather than what they buy and try!
Lets say you needed 100Ah usable capacity from your batteries, and your main charging system was from the vehicles alternator. Now with conventional deep cycle batteries because you would only have 25% of your battery bank usable you would need 400Ah of battery bank, now there are a few ways you could do this, but the least expensive way would be four x 225Ah 6 volt Trojan batteries at a cost of $1,120. Now with AGM batteries you could have just two x 100Ah giving you 200Ah total, so there is your 100 Ah with heaps in reserve and an easy life for the batteries, so only 2 batteries, at a cost of $710 all up, or better still you could use a single 200Ah battery for a cost of $695.00. - See more at: http://www.fridge-and-solar.net/agm.htm#sthash.lE3bx5yy.dpuf
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