Its that time - I have two Lifeline 4DL 210 aH AGM batteries that now need to go.......anyone have any recommendations or experience with other brands, such as Rheology ? The Lifelines are pretty pricey
Lithium batteries are a great solution, but you likely cannot just drop in lithiums in place of AGMs on a given system. The shore charger and alternator regulator (and you have to have one) have to be compatible with lithiums, and there's other hardware and considerations in a lithium setup or you'll end up with a very expensive set of burned up batteries. Not trying to discourage you from going that way at all - but its not a drop in situation. You'll see a recent thread in the New Posts of someone designing their lithium setup - great place to start, and then read up on MaineSail's thinking on this as well.You can replace 400 ah AGM with 300 ah LiPo due to the ability to discharge to 75% - 80%. The weight savings is remarkable. You could replace the 2 ridiculously heavy 4D batteries with 3 easy to lift replacements. I'm in the same boat with 2 4D AGM's from 2015. Not sure how much longer I will use them.
You get what you pay for the discharge graph below was a brand spanking new Renogy 100Ah AGM that could only deliver 72Ah.....Renogy has a horrible reputation for quality and even worse for customer support..Its that time - I have two Lifeline 4DL 210 aH AGM batteries that now need to go.......anyone have any recommendations or experience with other brands, such as Rheology ? The Lifelines are pretty pricey
This would be the place to start..Lithium batteries are a great solution, but .......
great place to start, and then read up on MaineSail's thinking on this as well.
I think LiPo's are too dangerous for boats. When I charge LiPos for R/C planes I do it outside in fireproof bags!You can replace 400 ah AGM with 300 ah LiPo
The place to start is not which battery to buy. The place to start is with a simple question, what kind of sailing will I do over the next few years? Then, ask how will the batteries be charged? The answers to those 2 questions will guide your decision.Its that time - I have two Lifeline 4DL 210 aH AGM batteries that now need to go.......anyone have any recommendations or experience with other brands, such as Rheology ? The Lifelines are pretty pricey
Right, I was not distinguishing between the 2 chemistries. I didn't intend to mislead toward the wrong chemistry. It seems that lithium batteries for the marine industry are universally LiFePo4.I think LiPo's are too dangerous for boats. When I charge LiPos for R/C planes I do it outside in fireproof bags!
I think LiFePo4 is the way to go for boats and RVs.
Agreed. It is a systems commitment to be sure. I've already gone down that road in preparation for lithiums. Financially, though, that last step will be a doozy!Lithium batteries are a great solution, but you likely cannot just drop in lithiums in place of AGMs on a given system. The shore charger and alternator regulator (and you have to have one) have to be compatible with lithiums, and there's other hardware and considerations in a lithium setup or you'll end up with a very expensive set of burned up batteries. Not trying to discourage you from going that way at all - but its not a drop in situation. You'll see a recent thread in the New Posts of someone designing their lithium setup - great place to start, and then read up on MaineSail's thinking on this as well.