Battery amp

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Taffy

Active Member
Posts
470
Location
Wrexham North Wales
My ex mod 90 n/a battery dies twice inside a month after couple goes on glow warmer plugs to start it. I read it is 65amp 12 v battery. It that small ? My previous landy was discovery 200 tdi. It has 85 amps.
 
U are joking ?? Every 3-4 years ???? My old discovery has the same battery for 9 years. I just topped up the distiller water and put it on charge again ready for the snow lol
 
the 65 & 85A mean nothing for a starting battery , its the Cranking Amps (CA) or better still the Cold Cranking Amps (CCA) you need to look at.
 
Just been out for drive and a grin on my mouth seeing loads of cars struggling and me is bobby along saying snow ?? Lol. Right. My current battery in defender is 570 cca. The one in garage in 670cca. Didn't realise about the cca I thought the Amps of battery. Thanks guys for opening my eyes.
 
A retailer recommended battery will work for a while but you are using it at the limits of what it is designed to do. It will die after a few years (normally just as the warranty expires) and you'll have to buy another one which is what they want. Often they will sell you what they have and not what is best for your application - especially if they've got a surplus to shift.

My rule of thumb is to get the biggest capacity battery in terms of Ah (Ampere hours) and CCA (cold crank amps) that fits in the space available. Then when I need the battery to do its stuff under extreme conditions it can cope easily.

Ah = how long your lights will stay lit if you leave them on without the engine running. For instance on a battery rated at 100Ah it theoretically could deliver 100 Amps for an hour or 50 Amps for two hours or 1 Amp for 100 hours. Thats a very simplistic explanation but you get the drift. Most batteries cant actually do what they say on the tin unless under laboratory conditions.

CCA = how much current the battery can deliver while cranking the starter for a stated time at a stated temperature - normally 30 seconds at 0C. Some marine diesel batteries are CCA rated at -18C and are often cheaper to buy than your boggo standard auto battery. If they are good enough for the fishermen working off Peterhead then they'll do for me Defender down south and its what I have on my TD5. Check out the linky for details.

http://www.tayna.co.uk/Numax-CXV31MF-P3694.html

JMHO.
 
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A retailer recommended battery will work for a while but you are using it at the limits of what it is designed to do. It will die after a few years (normally just as the warranty expires) and you'll have to buy another one which is what they want. Often they will sell you what they have and not what is best for your application - especially if they've got a surplus to shift.

My rule of thumb is to get the biggest capacity battery in terms of Ah (Ampere hours) and CCA (cold crank amps) that fits in the space available. Then when I need the battery to do its stuff under extreme conditions it can cope easily.

Ah = how long your lights will stay lit if you leave them on without the engine running. For instance on a battery rated at 100Ah it theoretically could deliver 100 Amps for an hour or 50 Amps for two hours or 1 Amp for 100 hours. Thats a very simplistic explanation but you get the drift. Most batteries cant actually do what they say on the tin unless under laboratory conditions.

CCA = how much current the battery can deliver while cranking the starter for a stated time at a stated temperature - normally 30 seconds at 0C. Some marine diesel batteries are CCA rated at -18C and are often cheaper to buy than your boggo standard auto battery. If they are good enough for the fishermen working off Peterhead then they'll do for me Defender down south and its what I have on my TD5. Check out the linky for details.

Numax CXV31MF Sealed Leisure Battery 12V 110Ah 1000MCA 500 Cycles XV31MF - Leisure Batteries - Numax Leisure Batteries

JMHO.

By the way, I think it other way around. CCA are rated at 0F where as MCA (marine) is 32F.

Remember reading somwhere that a MCA rating is 1 third higher than what the CCA rating would be.
 
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