Not much difference
As previously noted, there’s not a huge “Power to Weight” difference between differing Lead Acid (Flooded) Batteries .For Comparison:Batteries wired in series will double the voltage of each.Batteries wired in parallel will double the capacity (Amp-Hours or Watt/Hrs) of one.Hence:Two 6 Volt Traction Batteries will be wired in series to provide 12 Volt output at the same capacity (as one).Two 12V Group 27 Batteries will be wired in parallel to provide double the capacity at the same 12V (as one).So:Two 6 Volt “Traction” Batteries wired in series for 12V nominal:Trojan ‘T105' (6 V) - 225A/H each (20 Hr rate), 62 Lbs each = 225 A/H ÷ 124 Lbs1.81 A/H per pound.orTwo 12 Volt (Group 27) “SLI” Batteries wired in parallel:Trojan ‘27TMH’ (12V) - 105 A/H each (20 Hr rate), 58 Lbs each = 210 Ah ÷ 118 Lbs = 1.78 A/H per poundFor those who prefer to compare Watt/Hours:2 Six Volt Batteries (Series) @ (225 A/H x 6V) = Total 2,700 W/H or 21.8 Watt/Lb (2700W ÷ 124#)2 Twelve Volt Batteries (Parallel) @ 105 A/H x 12V) = Total 2,520 W/Hor 21.4 Watt/Lb (2520W ÷ 118#)Either way, the 6 Volt Traction Batteries are about 1% more Weight Efficient than the 12 Volt - hardly significant.HOWEVER:It all depends upon the Amp/Hour specifications and weights of the actual batteries you are comparing. If you were to compare a 90 A/H Group 27 battery, weighing 52 Lbs to the 6V Traction - the 6V Traction weight advantage increases to about 4 ½%.HTH,Gord