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Interesting factoid about Group 31 batteries
I was talking to an engineer with a local school bus manufacturer yesterday
about Rutu's progress. I mentioned that I was leaning towards a high capacity Group 31 battery to use for the starter bank. More than the 4JH4 needs but would give me a lot of reserve. He replied that was a bad idea on a sailboat. Seems that they no longer equip their school busses with 925 CCA Group 31's because they have a very high self discharge rate. They are great for regular highway use but school busses like sailboats spend a lot of time with the engine off. The 620 to 700 CCA batteries hold their charge much better and will last a lot longer in that type service. Just another tidbit to store away for future use. -- Glenn Ashmore I'm building a 45' cutter in strip/composite. Watch my progress (or lack there of) at: http://www.rutuonline.com Shameless Commercial Division: http://www.spade-anchor-us.com |
Interesting factoid about Group 31 batteries
Glenn Ashmore wrote:
I was talking to an engineer with a local school bus manufacturer yesterday about Rutu's progress. I mentioned that I was leaning towards a high capacity Group 31 battery to use for the starter bank. More than the 4JH4 needs but would give me a lot of reserve. He replied that was a bad idea on a sailboat. Seems that they no longer equip their school busses with 925 CCA Group 31's because they have a very high self discharge rate. They are great for regular highway use but school busses like sailboats spend a lot of time with the engine off. The 620 to 700 CCA batteries hold their charge much better and will last a lot longer in that type service. Just another tidbit to store away for future use. I've used AGM's for my starting batteries. The self discharge is very low, and the cost isn't that high. |
Interesting factoid about Group 31 batteries
Glenn Ashmore wrote:
I was talking to an engineer with a local school bus manufacturer yesterday about Rutu's progress. I mentioned that I was leaning towards a high capacity Group 31 battery to use for the starter bank. More than the 4JH4 needs but would give me a lot of reserve. He replied that was a bad idea on a sailboat. Seems that they no longer equip their school busses with 925 CCA Group 31's because they have a very high self discharge rate. They are great for regular highway use but school busses like sailboats spend a lot of time with the engine off. The 620 to 700 CCA batteries hold their charge much better and will last a lot longer in that type service. Just another tidbit to store away for future use. Glenn, thanks for the info. I targeted Gr-31s as my battery because they are cheap & readily available... the last bunch I bought were no-maintenance types from the 'Batteries Plus' outlet, re-labelled Exides. Jeff wrote: I've used AGM's for my starting batteries. The self discharge is very low, and the cost isn't that high. I haven't found AGMs for less than about twice the price of 'dual-purpose' Gr-31s, which are about $60 at the farm-n-truck supply. OTOH I'm surprised Glenn isn't buying Surrette batteries for his boat. Fresh Breezes- Doug King |
Interesting factoid about Group 31 batteries
Someone help me out here. I always thought that the Group number just
specified the size/shape of the battery. Why would thhe size or capcity affect its ability to hold a charge? Are you talking about a specific manufacturer's battery? I can see how one manufactures group 31 my not, but Group 31's in general? "Glenn Ashmore" wrote in message news:eC4Ef.15932$Dh.8853@dukeread04... I was talking to an engineer with a local school bus manufacturer yesterday about Rutu's progress. I mentioned that I was leaning towards a high capacity Group 31 battery to use for the starter bank. More than the 4JH4 needs but would give me a lot of reserve. He replied that was a bad idea on a sailboat. Seems that they no longer equip their school busses with 925 CCA Group 31's because they have a very high self discharge rate. They are great for regular highway use but school busses like sailboats spend a lot of time with the engine off. The 620 to 700 CCA batteries hold their charge much better and will last a lot longer in that type service. Just another tidbit to store away for future use. -- Glenn Ashmore I'm building a 45' cutter in strip/composite. Watch my progress (or lack there of) at: http://www.rutuonline.com Shameless Commercial Division: http://www.spade-anchor-us.com |
Interesting factoid about Group 31 batteries
On Wed, 01 Feb 2006 13:03:26 -0500, DSK wrote:
OTOH I'm surprised Glenn isn't buying Surrette batteries for his boat. Surrette and Rolls both make great batteries, no question about that. I'm certainly curious as to why Group 31s would have a higher self discharge rate than others. I've never heard that before and wonder if it could possibly have been related to a specific manufacturer or a bad batch. Any boat left unattended should have some means of keeping the batteries topped off in my opinion. On my old boat I used golf cart batts for everything, never had a problem, even starting up cold 454s. My new boat is set up for 8D starting batts and I've left it that way but added 8 golf carts in two separate house banks. |
Interesting factoid about Group 31 batteries
It is not all Group 31 batteries. Just the high capacity 925 CCA type.
Here is the service bulletin they got from their chassis supplier: http://www.internationaldelivers.com...pdf/dyk128.pdf -- Glenn Ashmore I'm building a 45' cutter in strip/composite. Watch my progress (or lack there of) at: http://www.rutuonline.com Shameless Commercial Division: http://www.spade-anchor-us.com "johnhh" wrote in message ... Someone help me out here. I always thought that the Group number just specified the size/shape of the battery. Why would thhe size or capcity affect its ability to hold a charge? Are you talking about a specific manufacturer's battery? I can see how one manufactures group 31 my not, but Group 31's in general? "Glenn Ashmore" wrote in message news:eC4Ef.15932$Dh.8853@dukeread04... I was talking to an engineer with a local school bus manufacturer yesterday about Rutu's progress. I mentioned that I was leaning towards a high capacity Group 31 battery to use for the starter bank. More than the 4JH4 needs but would give me a lot of reserve. He replied that was a bad idea on a sailboat. Seems that they no longer equip their school busses with 925 CCA Group 31's because they have a very high self discharge rate. They are great for regular highway use but school busses like sailboats spend a lot of time with the engine off. The 620 to 700 CCA batteries hold their charge much better and will last a lot longer in that type service. Just another tidbit to store away for future use. -- Glenn Ashmore I'm building a 45' cutter in strip/composite. Watch my progress (or lack there of) at: http://www.rutuonline.com Shameless Commercial Division: http://www.spade-anchor-us.com |
Interesting factoid about Group 31 batteries
OTOH I'm surprised Glenn isn't buying Surrette batteries for his boat.
You just gotta draw the line somewhere. Besides the Trojan distributor here in town rents his warehouse from me. :-) -- Glenn Ashmore I'm building a 45' cutter in strip/composite. Watch my progress (or lack there of) at: http://www.rutuonline.com Shameless Commercial Division: http://www.spade-anchor-us.com |
Interesting factoid about Group 31 batteries
DSK wrote:
.... Jeff wrote: I've used AGM's for my starting batteries. The self discharge is very low, and the cost isn't that high. I haven't found AGMs for less than about twice the price of 'dual-purpose' Gr-31s, which are about $60 at the farm-n-truck supply. I found Optima's at an auto shop (PEP? Autozone?) for about $100. We'll find out in about 3 years if they do better than the el cheapo's they replaced. OTOH I'm surprised Glenn isn't buying Surrette batteries for his boat. I was in my marina office asking if they could match they price I had for 4 Trojan 105 6 Volts ($280 from a golf cart company). They could come close using AC Delco, but not Trojan. Just then, the Surrette distributor walked in and started explaining to me that while Trojan's were very good, they weren't the same as Surrette's. Since the Surrette's cost about $800 for the set, I figured that paying a third for a bank that's almost as good was a deal. The previous Trojans had lasted 6 hard seasons, so I didn't think Surrettes would be much better. OTOH, the Surrettes that came with my previous boat lasted 12 years, so it might be a tossup. |
Interesting factoid about Group 31 batteries
Hello Glenn,
I am also skeptical. Couldn't find out what the CT-400 is or who wrote it or why, but the idea that someone would make a high-capacity Group 31 battery and then recommend it only for frequent charging use sounds almost counter-intuitive. After a very quick check of Exide's battery application guide, it appears that their only Group 31, 925 cca battery carries a 24-month warranty! Talk about disposable. They have other Group 31's with lower cca ratings carrying the same warranty, and they also have Group 31's with lower cca ratings carrying six and seven year warranties. But it is probably a true statement that all of the Exide Group 31's rated at 925 cca will not last long, for whatever reason. A similar statement could not be made about ALL of the Exide Group 31's with lower 925 cca ratings. Make sense? Sounds like it might be coincidence. Chuck Glenn Ashmore wrote: It is not all Group 31 batteries. Just the high capacity 925 CCA type. Here is the service bulletin they got from their chassis supplier: http://www.internationaldelivers.com...pdf/dyk128.pdf |
Interesting factoid about Group 31 batteries
I think what the bus company is saying about the batteries makes
perfect sense. You get CCA, the ability to put out a lot of power in a short period, by having more plate surface area. The only way to get more surface area in the same box size is to have more plates. More plates will be thinner and less rugged. Reducing the space between the plates also makes the changes in shape that is inevitable with deep charging cycles more likely to cause plates to touch. Self discharge should be primarily a function of surface area as that is where the reactions take place. More surface area for more fast output capacity has got to be a trade off for self discharge rate. The only way to avoid these trade offs is to increase the size of the box which is effectively what they are recommending when they suggest increasing the number of batteries. -- Roger Long "chuck" wrote in message link.net... Hello Glenn, I am also skeptical. Couldn't find out what the CT-400 is or who wrote it or why, but the idea that someone would make a high-capacity Group 31 battery and then recommend it only for frequent charging use sounds almost counter-intuitive. After a very quick check of Exide's battery application guide, it appears that their only Group 31, 925 cca battery carries a 24-month warranty! Talk about disposable. They have other Group 31's with lower cca ratings carrying the same warranty, and they also have Group 31's with lower cca ratings carrying six and seven year warranties. But it is probably a true statement that all of the Exide Group 31's rated at 925 cca will not last long, for whatever reason. A similar statement could not be made about ALL of the Exide Group 31's with lower 925 cca ratings. Make sense? Sounds like it might be coincidence. Chuck Glenn Ashmore wrote: It is not all Group 31 batteries. Just the high capacity 925 CCA type. Here is the service bulletin they got from their chassis supplier: http://www.internationaldelivers.com...pdf/dyk128.pdf |
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