Could be, but
what they DIDN'T tell you is whether the batteries maintained their amp-hr rating throughout the course of those 600 cycles. I would doubt it.Also, it's my guess that their definition of full discharge is 1.75 volts per cell, or 10.5 volts for a 12 volt system. Note that by that definition and at those voltages many of your onboard systems would have long since shut-down. It's an impressive test that shows they build tough batteries but it's not particularly meanigful in terms of onboard usage. Fred's right, shoot for a 50% discharge or a voltage reading of no lower than 11.8-12.0 voltsWe're full time live-aboards and we're on our second set of batteries. The first set were Interstate blems (I'm cheap) that had to live with an ancient piece of crap Guest charger, no equalizations and a skipper (me) who learns by making every mistake in the book. Amazingly, they lasted 3 years. Our current set of Sam's Club Stowaways (I'm still cheap) live with a Xantrax Trucharge 40+, get equalized regularly and after nearly 2 years show better capacity and specific gravity readings than when they were new.Maintenance is everything.