Bear in NM
Adventurer
Great thread. Much like the OP, I did this same investigation last winter. My van sits in the driveway all winter, other than in town running around occasionally. Winters here in northern NM sound much like his. Months of freezing nights, some nights well below zero. In April, I redesigned my Van inside battery box/charging station to accommodate two battle Born heated batteries. Full on Victron upgrade to all charging/monitoring gear. I dropped my two AGM's in until I was ready to order the BB. Never pulled the trigger on the BB's this summer, as my AGM's are running strong, still. It's nice to have the solar on the roof of the van running all winter taking care of keeping my AGM's in great shape, even with the cold nights (and days). Pretty much just brush the snow of the panels occasionally, and not worry about the system at all.
My research (and experience with Lithium batteries in other uses) pretty much mirrored what has been noted here. For my climate and use, go heated Lithium, with a brand that has the ability to turn off heating, and plan to just power everything down during the winter. The lithium would be fine just sitting in the van during the winter, with all solar and loads powered off. Just a couple of years ago we were discussing the options here on EP, and it was mostly around heating sources like pads and blankets . A couple of years has yielded pretty nice advances in Lithium use. definitely going to drop the BB's (or perhaps what may evolve this winter from the MFG side) next spring. The system will take a little more fiddling than my current AGM system, but nothing too terribly complicated.
As an aside, I did build a Victron 100ah lithium battery box, in a Pelican case. Also full on victron gear inside the box. It sits in my house, nice and toasty, ready to roll. Can plug in solar, shore power etc. I note this, as with the significant weight reduction with lithium, one can actually design a basic drop in battery "cell package" that is weight manageable to store in a temp stable environment, then carry it out and plunk it into the vehicle for a trip. 100 ah would be easy, as mine is. 200 a bit closer to the limits of portable, but not crazy heavy. Just a thought.
Craig
My research (and experience with Lithium batteries in other uses) pretty much mirrored what has been noted here. For my climate and use, go heated Lithium, with a brand that has the ability to turn off heating, and plan to just power everything down during the winter. The lithium would be fine just sitting in the van during the winter, with all solar and loads powered off. Just a couple of years ago we were discussing the options here on EP, and it was mostly around heating sources like pads and blankets . A couple of years has yielded pretty nice advances in Lithium use. definitely going to drop the BB's (or perhaps what may evolve this winter from the MFG side) next spring. The system will take a little more fiddling than my current AGM system, but nothing too terribly complicated.
As an aside, I did build a Victron 100ah lithium battery box, in a Pelican case. Also full on victron gear inside the box. It sits in my house, nice and toasty, ready to roll. Can plug in solar, shore power etc. I note this, as with the significant weight reduction with lithium, one can actually design a basic drop in battery "cell package" that is weight manageable to store in a temp stable environment, then carry it out and plunk it into the vehicle for a trip. 100 ah would be easy, as mine is. 200 a bit closer to the limits of portable, but not crazy heavy. Just a thought.
Craig