I picked it up at Sears before they closed the stores.
They closed? Next thing you'll tell me is K-Mart is closed too.
I picked it up at Sears before they closed the stores.
For those that run AGM batteries, are you also using a battery tender? That's suppose to prolong the life. As I understand it, a vehicle designed for flooded batteries might not always deliver enough voltage to charge an AGM fully. They would benefit from a tender in that circumstance.
For what it's worth , My oldest AGM is from 2010 and the newest is from last year in an ATV . 5 AGM ' s none of them have been on a battery tender .
I haven't seen an AGM need anything special , they work very well and don't leak or need water .
I possibly just got unlucky then...
I'll replace it with another AGM, but I'll go a bit cheaper this time. If the heat in AZ only gets me 4-5 years out of an AGM, no point in spending $300+ when I can spend half of that for the same life expectancy lol.
My TJ is also a weekend toy now. It gets driven a few times a month. I'm suspecting I discharged the AGM too much which ultimately lead to its demise. I would probably benefit from a NOCO tender designed for an AGM battery.
I see no reason not to go with this one: https://www.oreillyauto.com/detail/...gm/v/a/2324/automotive-suv-2000-jeep-wrangler
Order it online and you'll get an additional discount and free shipping to your door. (You'll still have to bring in your core in person). The specs are identical to their more expensive non-marine one plus you get both top posts and marine studs for all your accessories. Warranty is only a year but that's likely due to the fact that boat batteries get heavily neglected and they are not about to get stuck with replacing abused boat batteries for free every season..
BTW mine was made by East Penn as are my other two Superstarts but I understand Autozone may switch manufacturers on some models from time to time.
This was the exact one I was looking at because of another post you made. Appreciate you dropping it here again.
Just placed my order. Sidebar, do you know if the extra studs on the marine battery are safe to run the winch off of? It looks like the terminals are all one molded unit, so it should be fine. In my prior research, there was some hesitancy running winches off of the front terminals (since those are connected to the main terminal by thinner wires).
This was the exact one I was looking at because of another post you made. Appreciate you dropping it here again.
Just placed my order. Sidebar, do you know if the extra studs on the marine battery are safe to run the winch off of? It looks like the terminals are all one molded unit, so it should be fine. In my prior research, there was some hesitancy running winches off of the front terminals (since those are connected to the main terminal by thinner wires).
My Walmart special cheapo battery lasted over 10 years. I got my $73 worth. Bought another one 3 years ago.
My Wally World battery lasted 7 years, but I don't think they make them as good now.
the newest is from last year in an ATV
What brand did you go with? I can't get a battery to last more than a year in my 4wheeler. The factory battery lasted 3-4 years, I've since gone through 3 different batteries over the last 3 years.
There are some comments in this thread about using HP Tuners to alter the charging voltage of the battery. I can easily see this in the NGC3 (05/06) file under System -> General
View attachment 661133
I do not see the voltage control options in the JTEC+ PCM, Unless someone knows of them being buried somewhere else, I think 97-04 TJs may not have an easy way to mod this. I didn't remember buying an AGM last time I needed a battery, but as I was working on something underhood some days ago I noticed I did so came back to check on this setting and could not find a direct way of editing it.
View attachment 661132
I understand the range of voltage our alternators kick out from the factory (13.7v - 14.7v) is borderline sufficient for an AGM battery, and it varies based on the charge demand from the battery. AGM's require around 14.3v as I understand it. Our factory systems may not get an AGM battery to 100%, but I'm guessing the guys that get 7+ years out of their AGM haven't modified the voltage output either.
I have a NOCO on-board battery tender on order. Since the Jeep is a weekend toy, I'll just keep it plugged in. These short rides to grab groceries or drop the kids off at school probably isn't enough to consistently charge the battery whether it be AGM or flooded.
Good thread here about it: https://wranglertjforum.com/threads/calling-all-agm-battery-experts.82466/
I have a NOCO 5A on board charger on my AGM battery. I plug it in every evening when we get back to the camper or it stays plugged in when the TJ is parked in the driveway. I don't ever drive mine except on/off the trailer and on the trails. Every time I plug it in, it starts at the lowest level. It takes about 1-2 hours for it to be in the green maintaining level. I will say, the Jeep starts faster once it is fully charged by the NOCO than it does after being on the trails all day.I understand the range of voltage our alternators kick out from the factory (13.7v - 14.7v) is borderline sufficient for an AGM battery, and it varies based on the charge demand from the battery. AGM's require around 14.3v as I understand it. Our factory systems may not get an AGM battery to 100%, but I'm guessing the guys that get 7+ years out of their AGM haven't modified the voltage output either.
I have a NOCO on-board battery tender on order. Since the Jeep is a weekend toy, I'll just keep it plugged in. These short rides to grab groceries or drop the kids off at school probably isn't enough to consistently charge the battery whether it be AGM or flooded.
Good thread here about it: https://wranglertjforum.com/threads/calling-all-agm-battery-experts.82466/
