โAug-16-2023 08:06 AM
โAug-27-2023 05:06 PM
Veebyes wrote:
There are plenty of good reasons to go to an AGM. The double to triple the service life is only one of them. My first AGM gave me nine years.
In storage the AGM loses very little. My AGM sits, disconnected and untended, November to April and retains enough power to operate landing legs upon reconnection.
Zero maintenance other than annual terminals cleaning.
Yes they cost more. Much more. Given what they are over the 100 plus year old technology of the wet cell the AGM is worth it.
There's a reason why they are used in aviation and marine applications.
โAug-27-2023 02:00 PM
Campinfan wrote:
Thank you for all the great info. I did go get a 27 battery but next time I may upgrade to an AGM.
Not sure why my post does not make sense....it is the battery in my trailer that is listed. Maybe the manufacturer just went cheap.
โAug-27-2023 12:49 PM
Veebyes wrote:
There are plenty of good reasons to go to an AGM. The double to triple the service life is only one of them. My first AGM gave me nine years.
In storage the AGM loses very little. My AGM sits, disconnected and untended, November to April and retains enough power to operate landing legs upon reconnection.
Zero maintenance other than annual terminals cleaning.
Yes they cost more. Much more. Given what they are over the 100 plus year old technology of the wet cell the AGM is worth it.
There's a reason why they are used in aviation and marine applications.
โAug-27-2023 08:09 AM
valhalla360 wrote:Campinfan wrote:
Thank you for all the great info. I did go get a 27 battery but next time I may upgrade to an AGM.
Not sure why my post does not make sense....it is the battery in my trailer that is listed. Maybe the manufacturer just went cheap.
Why would you bother paying for an AGM? The only advantage is you can flip the trailer and the liquid won't drain out...if you flip your trailer, the battery is the least of your concerns.
If you don't change your use pattern, a basic battery is going to be fine when you need one in 7-10yrs.
If you start boondocking, better to go with a couple 6v golf cart batteries as you get more amp-hr per $.
โAug-27-2023 08:06 AM
RLS7201 wrote:Grit dog wrote:RLS7201 wrote:
Marine/RV batteries are compromise batteries. They were developed for marine trolling and engine start. They do not excel at either.
For you application a standard lead cell starting battery is your bet choice.
Richard
Youโre right about the first part, sort of. Theyโre actually just fine for starting and will take the short term high amp loads just fine but theyโre a compromise for deep cycle/ house battery use like trolling motors and campers because they have more/thinner plates to accommodate the high amp loads.
Second part youโre completely off/backwards. A dedicated starting battery while it will do the same job as a deep cycle, it wonโt do it near as long before itโs worn out. Thatโs why true deep cycles arenโt suitable for high amp starting loads. They have thicker plates that last longer under discharge conditions that a good operating starting / charging system keeps from happening.
It is my understanding that the OP was looking for a starting battery. Which makes my comments correct.
Richard
โAug-25-2023 09:31 PM
โAug-25-2023 11:26 AM
Campinfan wrote:
Thank you for all the great info. I did go get a 27 battery but next time I may upgrade to an AGM.
Not sure why my post does not make sense....it is the battery in my trailer that is listed. Maybe the manufacturer just went cheap.
โAug-25-2023 11:09 AM
Grit dog wrote:RLS7201 wrote:
Marine/RV batteries are compromise batteries. They were developed for marine trolling and engine start. They do not excel at either.
For you application a standard lead cell starting battery is your bet choice.
Richard
Youโre right about the first part, sort of. Theyโre actually just fine for starting and will take the short term high amp loads just fine but theyโre a compromise for deep cycle/ house battery use like trolling motors and campers because they have more/thinner plates to accommodate the high amp loads.
Second part youโre completely off/backwards. A dedicated starting battery while it will do the same job as a deep cycle, it wonโt do it near as long before itโs worn out. Thatโs why true deep cycles arenโt suitable for high amp starting loads. They have thicker plates that last longer under discharge conditions that a good operating starting / charging system keeps from happening.
โAug-25-2023 10:44 AM
โAug-20-2023 07:03 AM
โAug-19-2023 11:04 PM
valhalla360 wrote:Veebyes wrote:
Cram as many amps of battery bank in the space provided as possible.
That means doing some measurement of battery case size & seeing what will fit.
Typical case sizes are group 24, group 27, group 31, 4D and 8D. Each is larger than the next. An 8D is what you would see for starting large machines, or the marine version deep cycle onboard boast as 'house' batteries.
As pointed out a single group 24 is basically a waste of time. Good enough for a very small 'teardrop' sized trailer maybe.
Since the OP isn't boondocking, just get the cheapest battery. If it's $4 to upgrade to group 27,OK but don't spend a lot of money on something you won't utilize.
The truck umbilical cord will handle the fridge and other power draws while running down the road. The battery really only needs to run the trailer brakes in the event of an emergency where the trailer becomes disconnected from the truck or to run the jack to disconnect before plugging into shore power once at a campsite.
PS: 8D batteries are almost never used as house batteries in boats or RVs. They are simply too big and awkward for normal humans to move. If you want a big house bank and don't want to go with lithium, the standard is 6v golf cart batteries. But again, this is all massive overkill for the OP who isn't boondocking.
โAug-19-2023 09:25 AM
โAug-18-2023 04:38 AM
Veebyes wrote:
Cram as many amps of battery bank in the space provided as possible.
That means doing some measurement of battery case size & seeing what will fit.
Typical case sizes are group 24, group 27, group 31, 4D and 8D. Each is larger than the next. An 8D is what you would see for starting large machines, or the marine version deep cycle onboard boast as 'house' batteries.
As pointed out a single group 24 is basically a waste of time. Good enough for a very small 'teardrop' sized trailer maybe.
โAug-17-2023 06:46 PM
โAug-16-2023 05:01 PM