Cheap trickle chargers still are not regulated, and many people use them with no problem. Their "regulation" is the DC potential they produce which is barely above or at full battery DC charge. The concepts regarding small solar panels are much misconstrued with regard to use of regulators! If the batteries are fully charged the voltage difference due to load effect between a small panel and bank is so small that there is minimal current, cool batteries. The best approach to this is to not leave them unattended for extended times no matter what system you use. MS, your advice to fully charge and leave them off the circuit in the winter or when not attended is best and is what I do for winter. Chief
Chief,
The terms "Trickle" and "Maintainer" have become abused and diluted definitions. Historically "trickle" meant a trickle of constant-current with
no voltage regulation. Charger makers have smartened up a LOT over the years, probably driven by lawyers, and tickle charging is almost non-existent today except for perhaps a few bottom feeding Chinese products.
There is not a battery maker out there who does not require a CC-CV (constant current to constant voltage) charge regimen
I don't know how "cheap" you are going but even the Harbor Freight "trickle chargers" or "maintenance chargers" are float voltage regulated.
The Battery Tender is float voltage regulated.
The BatteryMINDer is float voltage regulated.
The Schumacher "trickle charger" is float voltage regulated.
The CTEK's are float voltage regulated
The Black & Decker trickle/maintainers are float voltage regulated.
The NOCO is voltage regulated On/Off (pulse) charging
Etc. etc.
Even battery manufacturers such as Lifeline weigh in on "constant-current "trickle" charging:
"Trickle Charging
Method of charging in which the
battery is either continuously or intermittently
connected to a constant current charging source to maintain the battery in a fully charged condition.
Not recommended for use with Lifeline® AGM batteries."
FWIW this is a 400Ah bank that requires just 00.1A to not exceed 14.4V once the battery is "fully charged". This battery should be "floating" at 13.5V not being held at a CV of 14.4V. Even a diminutive 1.0A constant current trickle charger will easily push this bank beyond 15.0V..