Dave, perhaps you misspoke. There is no such things as "[a]pplying constant current at 14.7 v" or "constant current voltage for the AGM batteries you have is 14.4v."
By definition, due to the nature of FLA batteries, at constant current the voltage will change (increase) constantly. You can't hold constant current and constant voltage simultaneously.
If you look at the graphs you quoted, they two plots are occurring simultaneously, and show that during the bulk stage the current is held constant and the voltage increases over time. The bulk stage is terminated when the absorption voltage is reached, and this begins the absorption phase, which is the constant voltage phase. You see here that at constant voltage the current declines as the battery absorbs charge. This constant voltage is recommended to be 14.8 for the Trojan FLAs, and from 14.1 to 14.7 for the Battmaxx AGMs.
Holding the AGMs at 14.7 during absorption at 25°C is within spec for these batteries, and will not damage them. Similarly, holding the FLAs at 14.7 during absorption will not chronically undercharge them. This 0.1V difference is certainly within the measurement error and temperature variability we will see on sailboats. (Of course, you could optimize things with battery temperature feedback to the charger.)
By definition, due to the nature of FLA batteries, at constant current the voltage will change (increase) constantly. You can't hold constant current and constant voltage simultaneously.
If you look at the graphs you quoted, they two plots are occurring simultaneously, and show that during the bulk stage the current is held constant and the voltage increases over time. The bulk stage is terminated when the absorption voltage is reached, and this begins the absorption phase, which is the constant voltage phase. You see here that at constant voltage the current declines as the battery absorbs charge. This constant voltage is recommended to be 14.8 for the Trojan FLAs, and from 14.1 to 14.7 for the Battmaxx AGMs.
Holding the AGMs at 14.7 during absorption at 25°C is within spec for these batteries, and will not damage them. Similarly, holding the FLAs at 14.7 during absorption will not chronically undercharge them. This 0.1V difference is certainly within the measurement error and temperature variability we will see on sailboats. (Of course, you could optimize things with battery temperature feedback to the charger.)