Battery Lingo, and deciding on the right size.
I was looking around at what I can buy local, and not that this is the battery I plan to use, but I would like to know how to interpret this. I would like to use two 6 volt gold cart batteries, and these happen to be maintenance free AGM batteries made by Duracell. If this is not ideal, is it still pretty good, or do I need to find batteries that need venting, and not AGM?
The 2 100 watt panels are what will charge them, and this is what I see when I look at spec's. My understanding of amphour goes to the extent that a battery can deliver so many amps for so many hours. That's it. These specs have me a bit puzzled. Can someone help me break this down to simple terms that I can apply to other batteries that may give me the same sort of information?
What I learned from you guys so far, is that AGM is not the way to go, yet Golf Cart batteries are one option, and this one happens to be AGM. I also learned that some battery companies leave certain information off the battery to make unsuspecting \ ignorant buyers more apt to buy it.
I also know that you can tell a lot about a battery if they give you enough information, such a CCA, and when the use the words reserve power.
Can you apply that knowledge to this battery and break it down for me to get a better understanding?
I will be planning to use two of these to achieve a 12 volt system with 200 watts of panel power. I will use a MPPT charge controller, even if I have to buy a new one after testing the one I already bought.
Thanks guys..
Joe
Specifications
•1 amp hour rate:103
•100 amp hour rate:220
•20 amp hour rate:190
•3 amp hour rate:145
•5 amp hour rate:163
•6 amp hour rate:167.8
•8 amp hour rate:173.7
•BCI Group Size:GC2
•CCA at 0 degrees F:680
•MCA at 32 degrees F:900
•Minutes at 15 amps:718
•Minutes at 25 amps:409
•Minutes at 5 amps:2304
•Minutes at 50 amps:171
•Minutes at 75 amps:94
•Minutes at 8 amps:1409
•Reserve Capacity:380
•Volts:6
I was looking around at what I can buy local, and not that this is the battery I plan to use, but I would like to know how to interpret this. I would like to use two 6 volt gold cart batteries, and these happen to be maintenance free AGM batteries made by Duracell. If this is not ideal, is it still pretty good, or do I need to find batteries that need venting, and not AGM?
The 2 100 watt panels are what will charge them, and this is what I see when I look at spec's. My understanding of amphour goes to the extent that a battery can deliver so many amps for so many hours. That's it. These specs have me a bit puzzled. Can someone help me break this down to simple terms that I can apply to other batteries that may give me the same sort of information?
What I learned from you guys so far, is that AGM is not the way to go, yet Golf Cart batteries are one option, and this one happens to be AGM. I also learned that some battery companies leave certain information off the battery to make unsuspecting \ ignorant buyers more apt to buy it.
I also know that you can tell a lot about a battery if they give you enough information, such a CCA, and when the use the words reserve power.
Can you apply that knowledge to this battery and break it down for me to get a better understanding?
I will be planning to use two of these to achieve a 12 volt system with 200 watts of panel power. I will use a MPPT charge controller, even if I have to buy a new one after testing the one I already bought.
Thanks guys..
Joe
Specifications
•1 amp hour rate:103
•100 amp hour rate:220
•20 amp hour rate:190
•3 amp hour rate:145
•5 amp hour rate:163
•6 amp hour rate:167.8
•8 amp hour rate:173.7
•BCI Group Size:GC2
•CCA at 0 degrees F:680
•MCA at 32 degrees F:900
•Minutes at 15 amps:718
•Minutes at 25 amps:409
•Minutes at 5 amps:2304
•Minutes at 50 amps:171
•Minutes at 75 amps:94
•Minutes at 8 amps:1409
•Reserve Capacity:380
•Volts:6
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