โOct-03-2018 04:58 PM
โOct-30-2018 04:41 AM
4x4van wrote:Dusty R wrote:Been using 2-6V batteries for about 15 years, and most of my campmates have as well...none of us has ever had a 6v battery just "go bad".
I always looked at it this way. If I was out in the middle of nowhere with 2-6 volt batteries in series, and 1 went bad I would be dead in the water. Where if I had 2-12 volt in parallel and one died I would just unhook it, I would have only half as amp hour, but I would still have some power.
Dusty
โOct-29-2018 01:48 PM
Dusty R wrote:Been using 2-6V batteries for about 15 years, and most of my campmates have as well...none of us has ever had a 6v battery just "go bad".
I always looked at it this way. If I was out in the middle of nowhere with 2-6 volt batteries in series, and 1 went bad I would be dead in the water. Where if I had 2-12 volt in parallel and one died I would just unhook it, I would have only half as amp hour, but I would still have some power.
Dusty
โOct-09-2018 07:18 AM
Dusty R wrote:
I always looked at it this way. If I was out in the middle of nowhere with 2-6 volt batteries in series, and 1 went bad I would be dead in the water. Where if I had 2-12 volt in parallel and one died I would just unhook it, I would have only half as amp hour, but I would still have some power.
โOct-05-2018 06:46 AM
โOct-05-2018 05:30 AM
โOct-04-2018 08:00 PM
Bill.Satellite wrote:
So, 1 6V battery rated at 210 would give you 210 ah in 12V when you connect 2. If that's all you need then you are good to go. However, if you had 2 12V batteries that each put out 210ah then you would need 4 6V batteries to provide the same number of AH's.
โOct-04-2018 07:23 PM
Boon Docker wrote:
You should have about the same Amp Hour with a pair of 6 volt as you would with a pair of 12 volt.
โOct-04-2018 05:45 PM
Dusty R wrote:12 V batteries have twice as many cells, so are also more likely to fail.
I always looked at it this way. If I was out in the middle of nowhere with 2-6 volt batteries in series, and 1 went bad I would be dead in the water. Where if I had 2-12 volt in parallel and one died I would just unhook it, I would have only half as amp hour, but I would still have some power.
โOct-04-2018 05:33 PM
Bill.Satellite wrote:
So, 1 6V battery rated at 210 would give you 210 ah in 12V when you connect 2. If that's all you need then you are good to go. However, if you had 2 12V batteries that each put out 210ah then you would need 4 6V batteries to provide the same number of AH's.
โOct-04-2018 05:30 PM
Dusty R wrote:
I always looked at it this way. If I was out in the middle of nowhere with 2-6 volt batteries in series, and 1 went bad I would be dead in the water. Where if I had 2-12 volt in parallel and one died I would just unhook it, I would have only half as amp hour, but I would still have some power.
Dusty
โOct-04-2018 04:48 PM
โOct-04-2018 04:46 PM
RedRollingRoadblock wrote:theoldwizard1 wrote:mike-s wrote:
A GC2 battery is 6V and typically over 200 Ah (the common Trojan T-105s are 225 Ah, but current Interstate/Costco ones are labeled 160, which is the low end).
Where did you pick up that information ? Everything I have read is that the Interstate/Costco GC2 batteries are 225Ah.
I was at Costco today in the metro Portland, OR area. GC2, 210 Ah on the Interstate label, $93 and some change.
โOct-04-2018 03:39 PM
theoldwizard1 wrote:mike-s wrote:
A GC2 battery is 6V and typically over 200 Ah (the common Trojan T-105s are 225 Ah, but current Interstate/Costco ones are labeled 160, which is the low end).
Where did you pick up that information ? Everything I have read is that the Interstate/Costco GC2 batteries are 225Ah.
โOct-04-2018 10:06 AM
theoldwizard1 wrote:When I went to get GC2s this spring, I swung by the local Costco, expecting to buy a pair. That's what was shown on the shelf tag, I think they wanted $90, too. I suppose it could have been wrong, but that's what it said.mike-s wrote:
A GC2 battery is 6V and typically over 200 Ah (the common Trojan T-105s are 225 Ah, but current Interstate/Costco ones are labeled 160, which is the low end).
Where did you pick up that information ? Everything I have read is that the Interstate/Costco GC2 batteries are 225Ah.