โNov-10-2020 04:46 AM
โNov-13-2020 03:11 PM
โNov-12-2020 04:12 PM
Gjac wrote:
I think maintenance trumps battery brand any day. When I first bought my MH folks on here told me Trojans were the best 6 v GC batteries to buy. They lasted 4 years and people said that's about right because you only dry camp. The next set were Sam's Club batteries that I bought in 2007 and paid $74 a piece about 1/2 the price of Trojans. I think they were Duracell batteries. They are still working fine after 13 years. Do I believe they are better than Trojans, no I just figured out how to maintain them better. I don't keep them on a charger 24/7, when the get to 80% or so I recharge them, only once got below 50% SOC, equalize them several times per year and never go to FHU CG's. Having said that there have been a number of posts about Costco batteries failing prematurely because they have changed brands and I'm sure Sam's Club batteries have changed since I bought mine. I also noticed as a previous poster pointed out there may be different brands at Costco or Sam's based on the region of the US you are in. My Walmart starting battery lasted 9 years in the MH because I charged it when I charged my chassis batteries. I never had a starting battery last that long in my cars only being charged from a alternator.
โNov-12-2020 01:19 PM
โNov-12-2020 01:02 PM
MEXICOWANDERER wrote:
Do you think a Rolls is going to survive that treatment any better?
I proved it irrefutably in white paper test studies.
But people *refuse* to learn how to recover a battery. They are too lazy to read the free Rolls battery manual download. My crankiness suggests these are the same people who blame schools for not raising their children right.
โNov-12-2020 12:28 PM
โNov-12-2020 12:13 PM
โNov-12-2020 09:48 AM
MEXICOWANDERER wrote:
Find an alternative brand to my 23 year old 2 volt cells? Or my 10-year old 31XT Lifeline that last capacity tested in the high eighties percentile?
I run into floods of obstinate "opinions" that argue my maintenance practices for instance holding a Lifeline at 14.4 volts for 8-hours when regaining access after an extended tour of heavy cycling. Then the same people remark they "only got six years service out of their Lifeline. Others wouldn't lower themselves to test a single weak sister cell very occasionally with a hydrometer and yet that is exactly how to double the life of a true premium flooded battery. Then they go on to say there is no difference.
Occasionally on the forum I encounter 12 year Lifeline owners but sadly few actual premium flooded owners who maintain their batteries correctly and flourish in their amazing lifespan.
โNov-12-2020 09:24 AM
โNov-12-2020 09:03 AM
โNov-12-2020 08:46 AM
23hotrodr wrote:
I am replacing 2 Walmart group 27DC batteries that I got 6 years out of. They are just now starting to use some water in a couple cells. I would love to replace with AGM batteries, but not sure I can justify the cost of the batteries and some recommend that I should also replace my PD 9260C with a Boondocker converter to use with AGM. I am strongly leaning toward just getting 2 GC2 batteries from Sam's or similar and hope I get at least 4 years from them. I must say that I am very pleased to have gotten 6 years from the Wally batteries.
Thanks for all the information. Happy travels-- Mick
โNov-12-2020 03:12 AM
โNov-10-2020 07:47 PM
โNov-10-2020 10:53 AM
Lwiddis wrote:
I think the AH rates are marketing tools for many battery makes...like engine horsepower, tow ratings. Generally in the ballpark but that is it.
โNov-10-2020 07:10 AM