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Old January 26th 17, 10:04 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Tango Eight
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Default SLA batteries and heat

On Thursday, January 26, 2017 at 3:45:48 PM UTC-5, wrote:
Evan: I get good service (several years) out of the batteries that I take home between flights and charge right away (and then disconnect from the charger). The battery that died was the one I left in the trailer all summer. It was fairly old even before I used it for that purpose. I would have just assumed it died of old age. But, the club batteries died too. And they were only 1 year old, that's annoying. And I don't really know how often they were left in the gliders. (Nor how good are the club chargers that they get left on for long periods.)

If we were to switch from SLA to, e.g., LiFePO4 batteries (as you have), will they survive the heat for long? How long? They cost about 5 times as much... And the promised large number of "cycles" is irrelevant if they too die after a few years due to age alone. We only subject most batteries to dozens of cycles per year.


lol. Moshe, you are doing a nice job of highlighting all the short comings of SLA batteries. Are you sure you like them? :-)

I ran across some 20 year old Sonnenshein 7 AH SLA batteries this Summer that would run an LNav and a radio for 3 - 4 hours (if you weren't too chatty!). Those batteries were very obviously much better quality (and more expensive) than currently available cheap SLAs all of which seem to be made in China. "Modern" SLAs seem to die after 2 - 3 seasons no matter what. And of course there are many ways to kill them much faster.

I didn't switch to LFP for reasons of economy... although you're making the case here that the economy of SLA batteries in our club environment is pretty bad! I switched for reasons of reliability, useful capacity, cold weather performance, & fast charging. The light weight is nice too if wrestling a 12AH battery into an awkward space is something you have to do (and I do). Four full seasons on that battery now. I tested it after 3 full seasons and it tested at 12.05 AH.

I think the club gliders ought to be on LFP batteries too... but so far I have been over ruled by the upper valley cheapskates.

best,
Evan