I have a customers boat that is launching this morning and I just got back from replacing the start battery.
The vessel has a bank of 6V golf cart batteries as house, that are now 6.5 years old, and a single G-31 "starting battery" the owner purchased at an auto-parts store in Canada that is now just two years old.
Last winter 2014>2015 the entire vessel was re-varnished, at a yard way Down East, and when the boat yard doing the work re-commissioned the vessel Bank #1 and Bank #2 (clearly labeled BTW) were wired backwards. This was not discovered until fall. The owner used the boat all last summer thinking the start battery was the house bank. D'oh... In the fall the batteries were disconnected and the owners battery maintainers connected to their respective banks as he does every winter..
When I started the motor to commission her a few days ago I used the house bank and it started beautifully. The start battery was showing decent voltage but when I went to start the motor on it the voltage collapsed, the battery was toast. As near as the owner could figure they only did about 20 deep cycles on it last season. They are normally very heavy cruisers leaving in early June and returning in late October, but they had a new grandson last summer and cruised very little compared to what they normally do.
The owner is very careful about not over-discharging and always stops discharging at 12.1V - 12.2V. They did mention that the voltage was dropping much more rapidly than it usually did last summer but just assumed the 6 year old batteries were getting weak. When I winterized in the fall we realized why the voltage was dropping rapidly.
Apparently 20 cycles on a starting battery is about all you get. The house bank has been to Newfoundland and back and likely has a few hundred cycles and is still in quite good shape for the age and use.
Be careful wiring, don't mix up your banks, and don't try using start batteries as house batteries...
The vessel has a bank of 6V golf cart batteries as house, that are now 6.5 years old, and a single G-31 "starting battery" the owner purchased at an auto-parts store in Canada that is now just two years old.
Last winter 2014>2015 the entire vessel was re-varnished, at a yard way Down East, and when the boat yard doing the work re-commissioned the vessel Bank #1 and Bank #2 (clearly labeled BTW) were wired backwards. This was not discovered until fall. The owner used the boat all last summer thinking the start battery was the house bank. D'oh... In the fall the batteries were disconnected and the owners battery maintainers connected to their respective banks as he does every winter..
When I started the motor to commission her a few days ago I used the house bank and it started beautifully. The start battery was showing decent voltage but when I went to start the motor on it the voltage collapsed, the battery was toast. As near as the owner could figure they only did about 20 deep cycles on it last season. They are normally very heavy cruisers leaving in early June and returning in late October, but they had a new grandson last summer and cruised very little compared to what they normally do.
The owner is very careful about not over-discharging and always stops discharging at 12.1V - 12.2V. They did mention that the voltage was dropping much more rapidly than it usually did last summer but just assumed the 6 year old batteries were getting weak. When I winterized in the fall we realized why the voltage was dropping rapidly.
Apparently 20 cycles on a starting battery is about all you get. The house bank has been to Newfoundland and back and likely has a few hundred cycles and is still in quite good shape for the age and use.
Be careful wiring, don't mix up your banks, and don't try using start batteries as house batteries...