I just came from a customers boat and his start battery is flat dead. The battery is a less than two year old Odyssey Thin Plate Pure Lead AGM battery. The part that is sooooo frustrating is that I last worked on this boat in September of last year and the battery tested at better than new CCA by more than 110 cranking amps. It started the engine like there was no tomorrow and did so perfectly for the entire 2011 season.
The batteries, both banks, were fully charged in the fall then stored. They also got topped off in Feb or March owner can't really remember which. Odyssey claims these batteries to be able to survive for two years with no charge.
"STORAGE LIFE - 2 years before needing charge @ 25˚C (77˚F)"
They only went a few months without a charge? When installed this spring the key was hit and the battery reportedly turned the motor over perhaps half a revolution then died altogether. Today when I got to the boat the voltage was just 2.7 volts. The battery was not even connected when I got there so phantom loads are out, though it does not have any..
I charged it via alternator for over an hour and voltage read 12.8 when I shut it off then began to fall rapidly dropping to under 10V in less than three minutes. At its peak the acceptance from the 140A alternator was just 6A. This battery can take more than this alternator can supply when healthy.. It tested at just 16 Cold Cranking Amps.....
The real mystery is that this battery was purchased at the same time as the house bank, also Odyssey TPPL AGM, and the house bank is perfectly fine and has been deeply cycled... Arghhh. I guess tomorrow I get to see if Odyssey really stands behind the product or not....:cussing: I sure hope they do because this is a very expensive battery....
It did get deep cycled once by accident during a race to Bermuda but that was in its first year and it performed fine after that. They never let the voltage drop too much before firing up the motor and the motor always started so it was not cycled that deeply. They are supposed to withstand cycles to 20% SOC / 80% DOD... This battery has done nothing but start a small Yanmar 3GM except for one race where they cycled it. In theory it should easily last 5-8 years..
"Warranty - 3 years for commercial, industrial, marine and automotive applications in non BCI sizes."
These "sudden" failures for no apparent reason are very frustrating....
The batteries, both banks, were fully charged in the fall then stored. They also got topped off in Feb or March owner can't really remember which. Odyssey claims these batteries to be able to survive for two years with no charge.
"STORAGE LIFE - 2 years before needing charge @ 25˚C (77˚F)"
They only went a few months without a charge? When installed this spring the key was hit and the battery reportedly turned the motor over perhaps half a revolution then died altogether. Today when I got to the boat the voltage was just 2.7 volts. The battery was not even connected when I got there so phantom loads are out, though it does not have any..
I charged it via alternator for over an hour and voltage read 12.8 when I shut it off then began to fall rapidly dropping to under 10V in less than three minutes. At its peak the acceptance from the 140A alternator was just 6A. This battery can take more than this alternator can supply when healthy.. It tested at just 16 Cold Cranking Amps.....
The real mystery is that this battery was purchased at the same time as the house bank, also Odyssey TPPL AGM, and the house bank is perfectly fine and has been deeply cycled... Arghhh. I guess tomorrow I get to see if Odyssey really stands behind the product or not....:cussing: I sure hope they do because this is a very expensive battery....
It did get deep cycled once by accident during a race to Bermuda but that was in its first year and it performed fine after that. They never let the voltage drop too much before firing up the motor and the motor always started so it was not cycled that deeply. They are supposed to withstand cycles to 20% SOC / 80% DOD... This battery has done nothing but start a small Yanmar 3GM except for one race where they cycled it. In theory it should easily last 5-8 years..
"Warranty - 3 years for commercial, industrial, marine and automotive applications in non BCI sizes."
These "sudden" failures for no apparent reason are very frustrating....