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![]() wrote in message oups.com... My advice would be to get a deep cycle battery, but make sure the CCA rating is sufficient to start your engine. Because you will be running your entire boat off a single battery, there is a greater probability that your battery may ( even accidentally) become seriously discharged. The deep cycle battery will stand up to the deep discharge/ recharge event better than a "starting" battery. Starting batteries use thinner plates to increase the amount of surface contact with the electrolyte within a given volume of space. That can produce more CCA. However, those relatively "thinner" plates self destruct more quickly under the stress of extended recharge and chunks begin falling into the bottom of the case where they can create a short and "kill" the battery. I'm a fan of a dedicated starting battery, but if you don't have sufficient space and can only fit in a single battery, get the biggest deep cycle that will fit. IMO Any boat used in the ocean should have 2 batteries. On a switch. Hard to walk home or get a jump start at sea. You can add the 2nd battery for about $50 more than the cost of the battery. |
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