โJan-09-2021 08:50 PM
โJan-11-2021 08:25 AM
Tom_M wrote:Absolutely. I'm the type that hangs on to vehicles and RVs for a long time so it's no skin off my back. Somebody mentioned how it's a waste of money because they won't keep the RV long enough to recoup the cost. I was simply pointing out that rolling over to new RVs every 5 years is already a losing proposition.TurnThePage wrote:You could always swap batteries when you buy a new RV.
No doubt they are expensive, but somebody pointed out how you won't get your money's worth out of them unless you keep your RV for a long time. I submit that if you are one to buy and sell your RV every few years, you're losing more than the cost of Battleborn batteries every time you replace your RV.
โJan-11-2021 07:12 AM
TurnThePage wrote:You could always swap batteries when you buy a new RV.
No doubt they are expensive, but somebody pointed out how you won't get your money's worth out of them unless you keep your RV for a long time. I submit that if you are one to buy and sell your RV every few years, you're losing more than the cost of Battleborn batteries every time you replace your RV.
โJan-10-2021 06:29 PM
pnichols wrote:
Of course ... you know that AGM batteries in 6V golf cart sizes for true deep cycle use are available? These 6V type/size AGM batteries definitely are not intended for vehicle starting.
The 12V AGM batteries in our MH ...
โJan-10-2021 03:52 PM
โJan-10-2021 03:36 PM
โJan-10-2021 01:14 PM
agesilaus wrote:
MIGO TMI..heh. He packs so much tech data in so fast it's impossible to evaluate. And I am a tech tho not of the electrical variety. One thing I fished out of the flood was that the cheap 6V golf cart batteries were the most cost efficient. Strange that he didn't include Trojans or another high quality brand into the test. He then launches into the life cycle cost analysis. That's where I gave up. I have to admit that I have suspicions that this fellow is in the pocket of Battleborn. The info about 6V batteries was inserted in a very fleeting manner, almost as if he was hiding it.
As for life cycle I will admit that if you keep your RV for 20 years or so then yes, Lithiums may pay for themselves. But most of us will not. And even if you have to replace your 6V battery pack once or twice over your time in the RV the costs will never approach the $4000 LiB battery pack price.
I have never been a fan of AGM, they are designed to start a vehicle not store energy. Golf cart batteries are designed to store power and so are the LiB.
So I'll stick with 6V unless the price of LiB plummets. Something I doubt will happen because of the scarcity of lithium.
โJan-10-2021 12:46 PM
pianotuna wrote:
They did not "green" the lead acid jars. The Mortons do accept gifts.
โJan-10-2021 12:25 PM
โJan-10-2021 12:20 PM
โJan-10-2021 11:14 AM
FWC wrote:
Assuming you are cycling your battery hard every day (365 cycles) then there is really not much advantage to a battery that provides more than 2-3000 cycles, as calendar aging will kill it long before cycle aging. For most of us here that may only deeply cycle our batteries 50 - 100 times a year, then 1000 - 2000 cycle is plenty.
โJan-10-2021 11:00 AM
โJan-10-2021 10:19 AM
โJan-10-2021 10:14 AM
โJan-10-2021 07:53 AM
agesilaus wrote:
One thing I fished out of the flood was that the cheap 6V golf cart batteries were the most cost efficient.
agesilaus wrote:
Strange that he didn't include Trojans or another high quality brand into the test.
agesilaus wrote:
So I'll stick with 6V unless the price of LiB plummets.