โMar-06-2015 05:31 AM
โMar-07-2015 12:11 PM
MEXICOWANDERER wrote:
Trojan and Crown have thicker plates with denser plate paste in their GC batteries
Rolls has the best.
โMar-07-2015 10:58 AM
โMar-07-2015 07:14 AM
โMar-07-2015 06:50 AM
MEXICOWANDERER wrote:It is easy to fall into this conclusion without looking at the whole picture. My first set of T-105's lasted only 4 years before they died. My second set of Sam's club batteries are going on 9 years old. I dry camp 95% of the time, but I don;t believe the Sam's club batteries are better, just that I learned how to maintain them better, not optimal just better. After reading a lot of posts 10 years ago how Magnatech converters overcharge and boil batteries, my Trogen's were being under charged and died of sulfation. The Sam's club batteries were still charged with the Vecter 40 amp car charger and floated at 13.8 volts with the Magntec 950. I still can't figure out how the 13.8 v Magnatec is a "battery boiler" as many on here have posted? The new batteries have never been below 50% SOC and have been recharged to 100% or there a bouts within 7 days. They have sat over the winter from Nov 1st 2014 to Feb 20th without charge and were at 80% SOC so now they are floating on the Magnatec to bring them back to 100%. Everyone has different requirements on how the camp. I don't watch TV or use the battery other than water pump or lights so the batteries last 7 days, by then I am out of water and out of clean clothes and want to move on anyways.
Talk about asking for unintentionally misleading info !!!
Trojan and Crown have thicker plates with denser plate paste in their GC batteries
Rolls has the best.
Let's assssume the T-105 Owner has deep cycled his batteries 270-times in 5-years
A second owner chimes in. His set of Snerdly & Throckmorton warehouse membership batteries have endured 39 genuine cycles in 7 years and spend most other experiences at 20% depth of discharge, prompt recharging and vacationing under ideal floating.
They compare notes. Misleading notes. "Hah! You only got 5-years service out of your Trojans and my Throckmorton's are going to enjoy their sixth birthday next month!"
A person will NEVER convince the Throckmorton owner his data is skewed beyond hope. He will argue until he is blue in the face.
Without knowing individual records of usage asking about "battery life" is fraught with peril. This is true with almost everything. People with opinions that are STRONG and LOUD out-blast folks whom they disagree with.
โMar-07-2015 05:57 AM
โMar-07-2015 03:22 AM
โMar-06-2015 05:05 PM
โMar-06-2015 04:18 PM
โMar-06-2015 12:19 PM
โMar-06-2015 09:04 AM
Thunder Mountain wrote:Fairly normal for light usage or float service. I would give them at least 12 years so 2018.
I have got to be running on borrowed time with my 4 6V house batteries. They were put in service in December of 2006. They've been kept charged via solar or shore power, never discharged, never allowed to run low on water and have had new cables.
Looked at new battery cost and had a bit of sticker shock. So how long can they last?
โMar-06-2015 07:43 AM
โMar-06-2015 06:58 AM
โMar-06-2015 06:58 AM
โMar-06-2015 06:42 AM