โMar-06-2015 06:29 PM
โMar-08-2015 12:22 PM
โMar-08-2015 12:06 PM
pianotuna wrote:
Hi,
See if Walmart has a battery intended for trolling motors.
โMar-08-2015 12:05 PM
bcbigfoot wrote:
I would grab a scale from housewares, check the weights, and see if the premium one has 10% more lead for the money.
โMar-08-2015 11:20 AM
โMar-08-2015 10:22 AM
โMar-08-2015 07:40 AM
โMar-08-2015 06:38 AM
โMar-08-2015 06:21 AM
โMar-08-2015 01:16 AM
byronlj wrote:Typically the number stamped on the battery is a date code indicating year and month of manufacture.
When I bought mine for my boat I noticed the same thing you did. I looked at the number stamped at the base of the cases and they were the same number. Same battery, different marketing. I bought the cheaper one.
Dave
โMar-07-2015 11:34 PM
โMar-07-2015 09:59 PM
MEXICOWANDERER wrote:If what you are saying is true... Then some one looking to replace batteries they have had for 5 plus years, would have no useful prior experience.... As the batteries they presently have are likely not going to be found under the same nameplate.
It is hard to argue with prior success. The battery industry is consolidating and subletting production to contractors so frequently that it is impossible to determine who makes what battery and to what standards that battery is made for. So it is best to rely on prior experience or mass recommendations by a lot of people rather than by specification labels pasted on the side of a battery. A general rule when comparing cyclable batteries is to find out the amp hour rating then divide that by the weight of the battery a true deep cycle battery will have less cranking amps less ampere hours yet weigh heavier than a light duty or marine battery. this is a question of the thickness of the positive plates Thicker plates have less surface area and the smaller the surface area the less the cranking amps and the less the amp hour capacity of the battery will have.
โMar-07-2015 07:24 PM
โMar-07-2015 06:32 PM
โMar-07-2015 06:19 PM
Ed_Gee wrote:
I can't offer you any opinion on which you should get, but I want to point out the rather devious marketing ploy they are using by providing Amp Hour specs at a measly 1amp draw. The Industry standard specification is a 20A draw. I suspect that for a 20A draw neither of these batteries would be rated at even 100 AH. Also makes it hard to compare to the other quality vendors who do rate their batteries at the 20A spec.
โMar-07-2015 06:06 PM