Feb-16-2022 05:31 AM
Feb-18-2022 09:47 AM
Veebyes wrote:I'd say you've definitely gotten your money's worth out of your 4D AGM's! You've obviously taken very good care of them.
No question in my mind now, lithium is the way to go however it is is still a bit on the pricey side for our frequency of dry camping.
Given a budget to work with for upgrades I would spend the money on the battery bank size, a multi stage charger & an inverter generator before solar.
I am currently on my second AGM battery, a 4D case size with about 215amps, in fourteen years. I have the programable charger, pure sinewave inverter & an inverter generator which works day or night regardless of weather, something solar does not do.
The key link is the useable size of the battery bank & how much you are prepared to pay for it.
Feb-18-2022 09:10 AM
Quint Da Man wrote:
Very interesting video on an extensive test of AGM vs Lithium batteries.
Enjoy
Testing RV Batteries
Feb-18-2022 07:58 AM
Feb-18-2022 06:11 AM
Feb-18-2022 04:26 AM
Feb-17-2022 11:58 AM
Feb-17-2022 05:53 AM
Feb-17-2022 05:48 AM
theoldwizard1 wrote:Quint Da Man wrote:
I live in Massachusetts and early spring late fall camping have many a night below freezing.
2 recent videos from Will Prowse.
CHINS $579 12V 100Ah, with heaters: Actually impressive!
LiFePO4 Cold Temperature Misconceptions: Do you really need internal heaters?
Feb-17-2022 04:29 AM
otrfun wrote:
If I were in your shoes, I'd want to do some kind of energy audit before going any further. I'd want to know how many ah's equate to "4 or 5 hours of light duty use". This data would help size any future system. Plus, it would be the perfect time to verify there are no high current parasitic situations drawing down your batteries excessively. You'd definitely want to rectify that problem before proceeding.
Have you had your 2 house batteries load-tested? Bad cells in relatively new batteries is not unheard of. It takes a fair amount of current, roughly 20-25a, to draw down two properly charged mid-sized, Group 27 12v batteries to 50% SOC in 4 or 5 hours. If you're hearing alarms, odds are the batteries are being discharged much lower than 50% SOC. This significantly reduces their longevity, ah capability and compounds your problem. Unless you're powering a residential fridge or some other higher current device, something doesn't sound quite right.
A voltmeter and a clamp-on DC ammeter would help answer all these questions in relatively short order.
Feb-16-2022 04:28 PM
KD4UPL wrote:
A group 31 AGM is about $350 each.
Feb-16-2022 04:23 PM
Quint Da Man wrote:
I live in Massachusetts and early spring late fall camping have many a night below freezing.
Feb-16-2022 03:03 PM
Quint Da Man wrote:If I were in your shoes, I'd want to do some kind of energy audit before going any further. I'd want to know how many ah's equate to "4 or 5 hours of light duty use". This data would help size any future system. Plus, it would be the perfect time to verify there are no high current parasitic situations drawing down your batteries excessively. You'd definitely want to rectify that problem before proceeding.
. . . I have a 2020 Thor Class C, it has 2 house batteries. Last year we joined Harvest Host and did a little more boondocking than usual. I found that the house batteries seem to drop below acceptable levels in about 4 or 5 hours of light duty use (TV and a few lights for a couple of hours). What happens is all the electronic devises hooked up to the battery system I.E. CO2, Leveling system, Fire alarm all start beeping at around 2am. The only thing that is running after around 10pm is the refrigerator and those smaller electronic devises . . .
Feb-16-2022 02:14 PM
Feb-16-2022 01:31 PM
KD4UPL wrote:In the long run it may be, but it's the up-front cost that's the scary part.
I don't believe lithium is worth the money for most people