Split and Separate-Use Battery Banks
I'm glad that you have enjoyed years of battery life. I still, however, don't understand splitting batteries for dedicated uses, like house and refigeration. Try this:IS IT BETTER TO HAVE ONE OR TWO BATTERY BANKS FOR HOUSE USE?(By Nigel Calder - I DIDN’T write this!!!)The popular arrangement of having two house banks alternated in use needs scrutinybefore I go any further.LIFE CYCLES: As we have seen, the life expectancy of a battery in cycling service isdirectly related to the depth to which it is discharged at each cycle - the greater thedepth of discharge, the shorter the battery’s life.This relationship between depth of discharge and battery life is NOT linear. As thedepth of discharge increases, a battery’s life expectancy is disproportionatelyshortened. A given battery may cycle through 10% of its capacity 2,000 times, 50% ofits capacity 300 times and 100% of its capacity around 100 times.Let’s say, for arguments sake, that a boat has two 200-ah battery banks, alternatedfrom day to day, with a daily load of 80 Ah. Each bank will be discharged by 40% (80Ah of one of the two 200 Ah banks) of its capacity before being recharged. Thebatteries will fail after 380 cycles, which is 760 days (since each is used every otherday). If the two banks had been wired in parallel, to make a single 400 Ah battery bank,this bank would have been discharged by 20% of capacity every day, with a lifeexpectancy of 800 days, a 5% increase in life expectancy using exactly the samebatteries!But now let’s double the capacity of the batteries, so that the boat has either two 400Ah banks, or a single 800 Ah bank, but with the same 80 Ah daily load. The twoseparate banks will be cycling through 20% of capacity every other day, resulting in atotal life expectancy of 1,600 days. Doubling the size of the battery banks in relation tothe load has produced a 210% increase in life expectancy. The single 800 Ah bank willbe cycling through 10% of capacity every day, resulting in a life expectancy of 2,000days - a 25% increase in life expectancy over the two (400 Ah) banks, and a 250%increase in life expectancy over the single 400 Ah battery bank!There are two immediate conclusions to be drawn from these figures:1. For a given total battery capacity, wiring the (house) batteries into a single highcapacity bank, rather than having them divided into two alternating banks, will result in alonger overall life expectancy for the batteries.2. All other things being equal, any increase in the overall capacity of a battery bankwill produce a disproportionate increase in its life expectancy (through reducing thedepth of discharge at each cycle).FOR BATTERY LONGEVITY, A SINGLE LARGE (HOUSE) BANK, THE LARGER THEBETTER, IS PREFERABLE TO DIVIDED (HOUSE) BANKS.I also agree that finding out what's making your batteries cook is the FIRST thing to do. Sounds like your charger needs some checking or replacement.Stu