Quote:
Originally Posted by goo
Isn't it just about the Ampere-hours? ie if you have a Lead-Acid battery and a Lithium battery both rated 14Ah, they should discharge at the rate rate - 1 amp for 14 hours or 0.5 amps for 28 hours etc.
Or maybe I'm missing something?
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Short answer - NO!
It's all to do with the achitecture and chemistry of the each capacitor and some confusion marketing too. The two types of battery you quote are different devices doing the same job so you have to rely on the makers' explanation and specs. to enable an "apples with apples" comparison when making your choice;
Lead-acid makers have used AHr(capacity) ratings as shorthand to indicate cranking ability, rather than a real usable capacity. The lead-acid capacity rating itself is based on a complete discharge at a low discharge rate. Under actual cranking conditions they will deliver considerably less than spec capacity. And because lead-acid batteries begin sulfating when only a small percentage of the capacity has been used, and their internal resistance rises as they are discharged, the actual capacity which can be USED may be as little as 20% of the mfg. rating. Discharge in excess will not only damage the lead-acid battery, it may not allow proper starting as voltage sags.
Shorai LFX are based on a completely different chemistry. Not only do they have less than 1/3 the internal resistance per capacity than do lead-acid, they are also the ultimate "deep-cycle" battery. The internal "completely discharged" capacity of a Shorai LFX is 1/3 the rated "PBeq" capacity. For example, the LFX18 12V series have 6Ah cells internally. But the cells are capable of 90% discharge without damage and while retaining more cranking ability. As such, the USABLE capacity(or "reserve capacity") of an LFX18 12V battery is on or very near par with 18AHr-rated lead acid batteries, while providing superior cranking performance and a vast reduction in weight. The Shorai PBeq AHr (lead-acid equivalent) rating system therefore allows users to compare a very different technology from lead-acid, but on a close apples-to-apples basis when making a choice.
Shorai's explanation. Colebatch is correct, Shorai sell an
equivalent 18 Ah equivalent battery which is 6Ah but will give the same or better real world performance as an 18Ah lead/acid battery
FOR STARTING. A motorcycle battery is a
STARTER battery and purposed to supply the required volts to start to engine and not to do any other task. Also remember, contrary to popular belief starting uses only a tiny amount of the battery's stored energy and is replenished within minutes. It's all the extras attached to the bikes electrical system combined with the inadequate OEM design of the loom R/R and alternator that stresses the battery.
Adventure 950 - Laverda's; now they were real bikes! lol. BMW's "technicians" are only allowed to plug into the CAN bus now. Your bike might be a smouldering puddle of solder but if the computer says "no fault found" then there's nothing wrong with your bike. It's the box ticking "computer says no" syndrome plaguing modern British life
Who would be interested in a two battery solution (one exclusively starter, one deep storage) with properly designed alternator, three stage charging and wiring loom?