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Len wrote in message ... I experience a very short battery-life and I want to know the cause before I install anything new. The fridge / freezer and other consumers constantly draw power (between 4 and 11 amp) I have a 3-stage 120 amp charger (bulk at 14,4,absorption at 13,6 and float at 13,0) My batteries are 18 months old. 6 x 180 Ah. They were called "Maintenance-free". As I understand now that means you can't add destilled water later on, don't see any advantage of that. At present my battery-capacity is very low. As I look at it now I'm confronted with replacing my batteries after 18 months. Anyone familiar with such problems that (maybe) arise from using the charger as a power supply during float-charging? Do I bourdon my batteries by creating a lot of small discarge/charge-cycles? Any advice is welcomed for this (surely not unique?) liveaboard- stuation with 220AC shore-power and use of 12-v appliances. Thanks in advance, Len. I suspect that your charger sees a lower battery voltage when you are using it as a power supply. As a result it comes out of float and goes back to either bulk or absorption voltage levels, boiling the electrolyte out of your "maintenance free" batteries. Many maintenance free batteries actually have caps that can be removed by careful prying, they come off in groups of three. Check yours and see if your electrolyte level is way low. Adding some distilled water to refill and then charging will get some capacity back. Next time buy flooded batteries and "Hydrocaps" for them. http://www.solar-electric.com/hydrocaps.html -- Ken Heaton & Anne Tobin Cape Breton Island, Canada kenheaton AT ess wye dee DOT eastlink DOT ca |