Home > In Car Electronics > What battery for a split charge? |
|
|
macfrank Member Since: 05 Nov 2015 Location: somewhere in the north Posts: 1076 |
I chose one that's similar to the original (which is still in place as the starter battery). Same size, about the same capacity (100Ah), but gel, deep cycle and also able to start the car
https://www.autobatterienbilliger.de/ECTIV...-GEL-100Ah (sorry couldn't find a uk web site) |
||
3rd Nov 2016 11:01pm |
|
dantastic Member Since: 04 May 2010 Location: London Posts: 367 |
A regular battery is great for starting the car. It is good at delivering a very high charge all in one go.
Look at getting a leisure battery instead. They are better at being discharged down to much lower levels than a starter battery can ever cope with. You can still start the car with a leisure battery in an emergency situation. |
||
4th Nov 2016 7:14am |
|
Cupboard Member Since: 21 Mar 2014 Location: Suffolk Posts: 2971 |
OK there's a common myth about "leisure batteries" being different from "starter batteries". For the size of batteries we're talking about, they're the same. There is no difference.
When you're looking at proper deep cycle traction batteries then yes, there is a difference but they're not remotely in the realms of what you'd consider putting in a Defender. Some background reading here: http://www.aandncaravanservices.co.uk/battery-technology.php And there's a thread that's recently resurfaced from 2012 where someone has put a really long and informative post on the subject. (quoted below) http://www.defender2.net/forum/post575217.html I've fitted one of these as my second battery: https://www.tayna.co.uk/Type-110-Varta-Sil...P7709.html It's a bit shorter than the standard battery (which is a 019) and loses about 5Ah of capacity but has the same (or similar) CCA. I bought a slightly smaller one because I thought I would have trouble fitting another 019 but actually having now done it I think it would be possible - and that's with a winch isolator, spit charge relay and I think my jump leads in the box too. Most batteries are rated for something like 400 cycles to a 50% dept of discharge - that means you can regularly take half the battery's nominal capacity out of it and still have a sensible lifetime so you need to do a power budget and work out if that's sensible. There are batteries rated to a lower DoD, the Odysseys are rated down to something like 30% which means that for a lower headline capacity they actually have the same usable energy storage. They are a low more expensive though. Split charging: I would be reluctant to do it ignition switched and would prefer to have some sort of voltage sensitive relay. The reason being if you've drained your auxiliary battery then when you try and start you'll be drawing the starter battery down with the aux one. It's probably not going to be a ginormous current, somewhere between 50 and 100A, but it's not going to help the starting process. I use a Victron Cyrix CT 230A which allows me to manually combine the batteries for winching or jump starting myself and I'm pretty happy with it. Other ones are also out there - but I did a lot of research before buying that one.
|
||
4th Nov 2016 7:46am |
|
excossack Member Since: 22 Feb 2012 Location: North West Posts: 5843 |
Thanks for the info. So really then, a leisure battery will still do as a jump start source, can be drained a bit more than a car battery.
I have thought about a VSR to trip the relay to enable the split charge, probably something I will look at later on. A battery such as > http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/12V-130AH-130-AH...SwzaJX9Rhf 1999 Defender TD5 110 Regards John M0VAZ Econet Station 48 no clock |
||
7th Nov 2016 9:41pm |
|
Cupboard Member Since: 21 Mar 2014 Location: Suffolk Posts: 2971 |
Yes you can use a VSR to trip a bigger relay that would work fine.
Or just buy a VSR that can cope, like the Cyrix CT 230 which does almost everything I want in a battery combiner: http://www.12voltplanet.co.uk/12v-24v-230a...biner.html A leisure battery can be used as a jump start source, yes. They don't deep cycle any better than a starter battery though - the reason being is that the difference between the two is the sticker on them. If you look at the one you've linked to it claims to be a dual purpose battery. On the subject of the battery you've linked to, I have to say I'm a bit suspicious. The dimensions suggest that it's a 019 battery, same as the standard starter battery in the Defender. Except 019 batteries are at best 100Ah not 130Ah. It's possible that Probat have managed to come up with something better than Bosch, Varta et al, however I think it's more likely to be marketing. If you look at a 130Ah battery from a manufacturer that you've heard of and you'll find they're a lot bigger than that. |
||
7th Nov 2016 11:12pm |
|
excossack Member Since: 22 Feb 2012 Location: North West Posts: 5843 |
Thanks for the hint, I hadn't noticed the size of the battery sounded too small for the Ah.
I wasn't planning on buying another relay for the setup, but I was planning on using an old winch isolator already mounted to the seat box to use as a manual link if I needed to link all batteries together for boosting the starting capacity. 1999 Defender TD5 110 Regards John M0VAZ Econet Station 48 no clock |
||
8th Nov 2016 6:03pm |
|
excossack Member Since: 22 Feb 2012 Location: North West Posts: 5843 |
Old)(ish) thread revival.... After some hunting for a battery of the right height I found this
http://www.batterymegastore.co.uk/batterie...xv110.html Appears to do what I want? Its difficult to work out the re-badged car batteries Vs Leisure batteries. According to the seller, this will give me what I am after (powering radios, lights and occasional use as a starter battery) 1999 Defender TD5 110 Regards John M0VAZ Econet Station 48 no clock |
||
28th Feb 2017 3:32pm |
|
macfrank Member Since: 05 Nov 2015 Location: somewhere in the north Posts: 1076 |
Looks correct, and cheap. Measures the same as the orginal one. AND - it has 110 Ah - 110 - I mean, how can this be wrong...
I have an Ective 100Ah Gel as second battery along with the original one. Same dimensions. |
||
28th Feb 2017 4:44pm |
|
Jim G Member Since: 21 Jul 2014 Location: Ormskirk Posts: 92 |
Do not use a 'leisure ' battery to start a vehicle, they are different from a standard car battery, they have more or thinner plates, and are designed for slow discharge to a lower level, if you start a car with one then you will buckle the plates and destroy the battery .
There are special ' dual' usage batteries which can be used to start a car in an emergency and are still 'leisure ' type. |
||
2nd Mar 2017 12:19pm |
|
bpman Member Since: 21 May 2008 Location: Oslo Posts: 8069 |
Duracell make vehicle batteries now .. I have one in my M3, more powerful than the OEM, and gell/glass cells.
Bit cheaper than the Odyssey and have 3 or 5 year guarantees ... and they are black and gold |
||
2nd Mar 2017 12:36pm |
|
excossack Member Since: 22 Feb 2012 Location: North West Posts: 5843 |
Thanks for the advice, the battery I linked to is a dual purpose one which by the looks of it will cover off what I want to do. 1999 Defender TD5 110
Regards John M0VAZ Econet Station 48 no clock |
||
2nd Mar 2017 12:55pm |
|
Cupboard Member Since: 21 Mar 2014 Location: Suffolk Posts: 2971 |
Did you read any of the previous thread? Your comment suggests you did not. Please go and read the rest of the thread, because in a nutshell you're wrong. You do get deep discharge traction batteries which are genuinely built with thicker plates however not for this sort of application. Electric forklift, yes. Leisure battery, no. |
||
2nd Mar 2017 9:25pm |
|
|
All times are GMT |
< Previous Topic | Next Topic > |
Posting Rules
|
Site Copyright © 2006-2024 Futuranet Ltd & Martin Lewis