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It's a 24V troller. I think the moving in and out of the boat bounces them
enough to short a cell at times. When I raced cars in the 60's and early 70's, the batteries did not last a very long time. We all ran Sears Diehards as they were warranted for life at one time. Bill "Wayne.B" wrote in message ... On Mon, 10 Nov 2003 07:10:03 GMT, "Calif Bill" wrote: Not that many cycles. I probably use the trolling motor 4-5 weekends a year. ================================================== = That's not many cycles at all. There's a couple of things that will extend life if you're not doing them already. Probably most important is to avoid discharging more than 50% if at all possible. The 50% level corresponds to about 11 volts under load, and it should bounce back to about 11.2 or 11.3 in a short time under no load. Next, is to always recharge promptly, preferably with a good quality 3 stage charger which can recharge to 100% without cooking the batt. Last but not least, consider using a couple of 6 volt golf cart batts wired in series (assuming a 12v trolling motor). Golf cart batts are cheap, have as much capacity as an 8D, and will take a LOT of deep charge/recharge cycles. They are rated for about 400 cycles if not discharged much past 50%. |
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