No, you deeply cycle the cheapest starting batteries you can find
That's a mis-characterization of me and is totally wrong.
I buy cheap deep cycle batteries for aux use and deeply cycle THEM. I deliberately beat them to death and replace them every couple of years.
I've stated several times what when it comes to the *starting* battery I buy good quality and do not abuse those.
I'm certainly many things, but a redneck I ain't.
With the camper I have at the moment, I use flooded batteries because it's 2WD and is not going to be in what pilots would call "unusual attitudes". Flooded batteries are easier to check, test and maintain, so when they are appropriate to the application, that's what I use. If it were appropriate to use AGM, or TPPL AGM, then that is what I would buy.
I recently replaced both the cranking and deep cycle batteries in my camper. I bought them at O'Reilly. Doing my homework I found that they sell a matched set (though they don't call it that or make any mention of it). Two Group 31 batteries, identical except that one is a cranking battery and one is a deep cycle.
I further found, that they actually have two different part numbers for those batteries. The difference is one has a "J" at the end. I suspected, and then confirmed, that the difference is that the batteries with the "J" in the part number are made in Mexico by Johnson Controls. It turned out the batteries without the "J" are made in the U.S. by Enersys.
They don't carry the Enersys part number on the shelves. To get them, I had to go to the store, "order" the part numbers I wanted and pay for them, then wait a week for them to be delivered to the store. They listed them on the web site for the same price, though in the store the price was a bit higher for the Enersys. So I paid the extra.
Before I replaced the batteries, I decided to test deslufation for myself. There is very little actual data on net regarding desulfation. All manufacturers of desulfators claim that it works, but that has to be discounted. There is plenty of anecdotal evidence, about evenly split between, "works great" and "doesn't do jack". Examples of both can be found in this very thread.
So I bought a charger that does desulfation, and spent a month testing it on an old beatup deep cycle that I had laying around for a core.
It didn't bring back that dead battery. Not all the way. Not even close. But it did improve it. A LOT.
So now I've added desulfation to my routine.
For the record, my last cranking battery was also a flooded battery, and I got the same 6 years out of it that teotwaki got out of his Diehard Platinum. That battery never had any special treatment, other than being recharged a couple of times with a charger when I left the headlights on overnight. It was maintained the entire six years purely by the truck's charging system, which does nothing except hold 14.5v at above idle RPM. Of course, being a flooded battery, I was able to check and top off the water, and also use a hydrometer to check specific gravity.
And it was still working fine - I simply decided six years was enough and since I had to replace the aux battery anyway, I did both.
Bailing on a forum with 100,000+ members just because you butt heads with one of them seems a bit of an over-reaction to me. There is after all an ignore feature. I personally wouldn't use it, because I like butting heads, but to each his own.
In this "Overland" community, there is a tendency to over-build, and over-buy. People want "the best". I'll leave off with a quote from Stephen Stewart:
"
Other things being equal a big leisure battery (or more probably several batteries) is a good thing. But leisure batteries are very heavy and expensive. Conventional wisdom has it that you should always use special leisure batteries in your campervan. These are made to withstand being heavily discharged whereas ordinary vehicle batteries are not.
If you have a good three/four stage charging system (from the alternator, the mains and from solar) then it is certainly true that leisure batteries (i.e. Deep-Cycle, Traction, Gel or AGM batteries) will perform far better than vehicle batteries, but at a very significant cost. However if you have a poor charging system and routinely abuse your batteries the benefit of proper "leisure" batteries is less certain. Leisure batteries are also impossible to find in many "overland travel" countries.
Towards the end of one journey my expensive, four year old leisure batteries failed (both of them). I replaced them with four very cheap (25 Euros) Russian car batteries. They work well enough to get me home without freezing. I think in any future overland campervan design I would make sure the area allocated to leisure batteries was sufficiently large and flexible to allow the use of say four or six car batteries in emergency."
http://www.xor.org.uk/silkroute/equipment/choosevan.htm