sailinglegend420
Well-Known Member
95% is considered a cruising charge that most people can get to quite easily, but every two weeks, or less if possible, they should do all they can to get back to 100%. The best way is an overnight shore power charger......I think if it matters whether my battery is 95 or 98% charged after 10 hours, then I probably need a bigger battery or a good look at the loads....
So why is that last 5% is so important?
As part of the chemical process of batteries discharging Lead Sulphate crystals build up on the plates. As batteries charge the reverse happens and the Lead Sulphate Crystals turn back to Lead Oxide and Sulphuric Acid. Temporary sulfation remains on parts of the plates when the battery is not fully charged and these Lead Sulphate Crystals will harden and become permanent sulfation. After 3-4 weeks even high voltages from Equalisation cannot remove these crystals and restore Ah capacity, so the batteries eventually die.
Sulfation is the biggest killer of batteries.