DaveInDenver
Middle Income Semi-Redneck
When I had an Odyssey die in spring about 2 years ago I bought the cheapest 12-month warranty Walmart battery I could find in the size just to keep my battery system intact for camping season. It was I think about $45, made in Spain. It ran my Engel for a few months while the warranty situation was sorted. After that it became my portable ham station battery, so it got deep cycled a few more times.Have you ever used a starter battery for occasional deep cycling? What kind of life did you see from it?
About a month ago the battery in her Subaru started taking a dive and it just so happened to be the same size, so now it's running her car daily, this being the first time actually being used as a starter battery and it's doing its job still. It gets charged and kept topped, so that helps. I'm not really demanding on the second battery, it's just an Engel (no lights, no devices) for a day or two. So it's not getting run down to 0% routinely and asked to fast charge every day.
It's not ideal but I don't think you're completely nuts. Will a starter type have less useful capacity than a true deep cycle? Yup, definitely. Will it age quicker? Yup, no doubt. Is sharpening the pencil and determining that periodic replacement is doable? Maybe. If you're buying a battery and the cost is a wash, get the deep cycle for deep cycle application. It'll work better and last longer.
As a true house bank doing starter batteries isn't a good choice, though in this case if you already have a spare battery or the cost difference is truly significant between a true deep cycle and a starter type you might be able to make it work if the price-vs-performance-vs-life curves meet at a reasonable point. In light use like this (which is really dual use or redunancy) you might go a year, it might go three.
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