I just picked up a deep cycle marine battery at Costco yesterday. item #207200Your road trek has a space built for lead acid and does not have room for two 6v . It’s very hard to beat a CTC marine deep cycle when it’s on sale , or Costco or Princess auto , somebody always has one on sale .
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Deep cycle/lawn teactor Batteries normally get cleared out of costco at end of season ($xxx.97 is the easy way to tell they are dumping them)I just picked up a deep cycle marine battery at Costco yesterday. item #207200
Was supposed to be $139.99 plus $10 core charge.
Once I checked out the receipt there was a $30 discount for some reason. Nice surprise.
Funny thing is that on Saturday I could stil see the product on the Costco site even though it said "warehouse only". On sunday item is not longer on the site.
Maybe these are seasonal for them and were on sale.
Just checked again. No $xx.97 on the original price . Just a seperate line with item #1691858Deep cycle/lawn teactor Batteries normally get cleared out of costco at end of season ($xxx.97 is the easy way to tell they are dumping them)
What actually causes the fire is not overheating but actually over-charging. Lithium batteries are a bunch of small 3V batteries in parallel/series. (there are 6 small batteries in series inside of your 2AH drill battery pack for instance) A Battery Monitoring system will work to keep things even (among other things). If 5 cells are at 2.5V and one is at 3V then you only have 15.5V. If your BMS is bypassed or non-exhistant, then you charge to18V, that outlier has a chance of being overcharged and on-fire. As you add parallel branches it gets harder to detect a single failing cell.You can run a residential size fridge 3 days on a lithium battery? That’s out standing . I can’t get much beyond 24hr with a 12v compact fridge on one battery .
One thing for regular folk to consider putting lithium into a spot where lead acid used to live , make sure you have venting / cooling sorted out and a battery monitor to shut down power draw if the battery over heats . The lithium batteries seem to over heat more often during discharge than recharge , they have been linked to a few fires .
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NFPA doesn't entirely agree. Discharge can hurt batteries and cause a thermal runaway. A battery explosion probably causes less damage than a raging fire.What actually causes the fire is not overheating but actually over-charging.
I didn't say that over discharge can't hurt batteries. I said that the common issue causing fire is on charging, and that its often due to lack of a BMS which most professional batteries (that aren't bought online from China) have.NFPA doesn't entirely agree. Discharge can hurt batteries and cause a thermal runaway. A battery explosion probably causes less damage than a raging fire.
"For most cells , discharge below 3.0 V can cause degradation of electrodes and thus discharge below the manufacturer’s low voltage specification is referred to as over-discharge. Repeated over-discharge can lead to cell failure and cell thermal runaway (discussed below). For most cells, charging significantly above 4.2 V (e.g., to 5 V) can lead to rapid, exothermic degradation of the electrodes"
"High rate discharges can cause heating of cells, in some cases to the point of damaging internal components such as the separator, and can lead to cell thermal runaway."
Jeebus you're pissy about this. I didn't google anything. That was a direct quote from the linked NFPA research paper on battery fires. In response to someone saying that they can burn during discharge, you implied that over-charging is responsible for all lithium battery fires. That statement is proven to be false by the paper.I didn't say that over discharge can't hurt batteries. I said that the common issue causing fire is on charging, and that its often due to lack of a BMS which most professional batteries (that aren't bought online from China) have.
Good job on googling the exact voltages. I was just using the nominal numbers because that voltage changes with battery chemestry. My LiFEPo4 batteries go down to 2.5V just fine for instance But can only take 3.5V. I generally refer to the battery in my bike as a 12V battery not a 13.6V battery or whatever it's max is before it starts on fire.
You can run a residential size fridge 3 days on a lithium battery? That’s out standing . I can’t get much beyond 24hr with a 12v compact fridge on one battery .
One thing for regular folk to consider putting lithium into a spot where lead acid used to live , make sure you have venting / cooling sorted out and a battery monitor to shut down power draw if the battery over heats . The lithium batteries seem to over heat more often during discharge than recharge , they have been linked to a few fires .
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Costco near me has all batteries on sale. Most ~$30 off. They had the deep cycle you got and a larger one for 180-30 iirc.Just checked again. No $xx.97 on the original price . Just a seperate line with item #1691858
@ $30.00-.
They had approx 25 in stock at Dixie and Dundas location
Oh yes. Well aware of their $xx.97 tactic.
Battery life can be very dependent on how it was used/maintained. Abuse it and capacity may be way down after a year. If you get over five years with decent capacity left you are doing well imo.Got my new battery. We'll see if my problem was an old battery on our next trip - 3 days unserviced.
Anyone got an estimate for service life of a deep cycle? This was my 4th summer with it and who knows how long was it was in before I bought the van.