RV BATTERIES
By Mark Polk - www.rveducation101.com
The life expectancy of your RV batteries depends on you. How they’re used, how
well they’re maintained, how they’re discharged, how they’re re-charged, and
how they are stored all contribute to a batteries life span. A battery cycle is one
complete discharge from 100% down to about 50% and then re-charged back to
100%.
One important factor to battery life is how deep the battery is cycled each time. If
the battery is discharged to 50% everyday it will last twice as long as it would if
it’s cycled to 80%. Keep this in mind when you consider a battery’s amp hour
rating. The amp hour rating is really cut in half because you don’t want to
completely discharge the battery before recharging it. The life expectancy
depends on how soon a discharged battery is recharged. The sooner it is
recharged the better.
What does all of this mean to you? That depends on how you use your RV. If
most of your camping is done where you’re plugged into an electrical source then
your main concern is just too properly maintain your deep cycle batteries. But if
you really like to get away from it all and you do some serious dry-camping you’ll
want the highest amp hour capacities you can fit on your RV.
Deep cycle batteries come in all different sizes. Some are designated by group
size, like Group 24, 27 and 31. Basically the larger the battery the more amp
hours you get. Depending on your needs and the amount of space you have
available, there are several options when it comes to batteries. You can use one
12-volt Group 24 deep cycle battery that provides 70 to 85 amp hours or you can
use two or more 12-volt batteries wired in parallel. Parallel wiring increases amp
hours but not voltage.
If you have the room you can do what a lot of RVers do and switch from the
standard 12-volt batteries to two of the larger 6-volt golf cart batteries. These
pairs of 6-volt batteries need to be wired in series to produce the required 12-
volts. Series wiring increases voltage but not amp hours. If this still doesn’t
satisfy your requirements you can build larger battery banks using four 6-volt
batteries wired in series/parallel that will give you 12-volts and double your AH
capacity.*
To get the battery that’s just right for your RV, contact you local Powerstride
Battery expert!
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