Shadow Catcher wrote:eamarquardt, the three stage chargers due to the electronics can bring a battery up to 90% charge with in a few hours e.g. the Progressive Dynamics charges in boost mode at 14.4 Volts till it gets to that 90% point then lowers it to 13.6 Volts and completes the charge.
Modern battery chargers are better than those of old and do a better job, agreed.
Per:
http://www.solarnavigator.net/battery_charging.htm
http://www.batteryuniversity.com/partone-13.htm
battery charging, done properly, takes longer than most people realize or plan for. Modern chargers can reduce the time but both of these sites provide guidelines and "rules of thumb" regarding charging rates and times and a "few hours" to properly recharge a deeply discharged battery is/seems unrealistic according to these sites.
In many of the posts, re batteries on the forum, folks seem to expect more from lead acid batteries than the batteries are able to deliver and reach a normal life expectency (if they can meet the posters expectations at all). Running a 12 cup coffee pot all day and an air conditioner all night are recent examples of overly optomistic/unrealistic expectations.
You can get more out of a battery than recommended and charge it faster than recommended but you will not get the life out of the battery that you'd get if you discharged and charged at recommended rates. I'm "patheticly cheap" (according to past comments of #1 son) and I try to get the most out of my investments and try and make em last.
All I'm saying is that to get what you want out of a battery you've gotta know your load (both amps and time) and how you're gonna charge it and how long that charging is going to take each day (or whatever) and plan accordingly based upon the specifications of your battery.
Plan ahead, be realistic, and you'll get what you want. Don't plan ahead, push the limits, and you may be disappointed. The biggest thing you can do to make the most of your battery set up is to minimize load. I never ran out of juice on the boat and was away from the dock for 10 days at a time using 100 amp/hour "marine" (read compromise between starting and true really deep cycle) battery as a "house" battery (with two in reserve for starting). I'd bet that not even 5% of teardroppers are using real "deep cycle" batteries (as in golf cart service type) and the 50% depth of discharge and charging rate of 10% of reserve capacity are reasonable "rules of thumb" for most folks systems (but there are four other digits and exceptions to any rule of thumb).
Cheers,
Gus