66SportFury
Senior Member
Cool I'll do that, thanks.
Check the link i gave and you will see it is 89 dollars , take away the automatic 15% off they give you for buying online , and its 75 bucks and you can still pick it up from your local store, I cant imagine a similar sized auto battery being that cheap.Marine batteries are rated at 32°F and car batteries at 0°F.
MCA v. CCA. It may not make a lot of difference, but an 800 MCA isn't as strong as 800 CCA. Marine batteries are built better.. thicker plates etc. for vibration resistance. I've never seen them cheaper though.
Read the Axion battery site. http://www.turbostart.com/
They are modern batteries. The first one I bought was for the convertible, it lasted me more than 7 years when last year the case developed a crack at the positive terminal. These batteries are VERY good.
As previously mentioned no point in them on a modified vehicle
Check the link i gave and you will see it is 89 dollars , take away the automatic 15% off they give you for buying online , and its 75 bucks and you can still pick it up from your local store, I cant imagine a similar sized auto battery being that cheap.
Pick a part is great 20-30 bucks grab one out of a dodge pu or van then scrap your old one for 12 bucks I'll see some of you at Carlisle with my pick a part batt.
THe Advance battery listing is CCA on this battery when you look it up and read it, it says cranking amps is actually 1000 CA, and as i pointed out, having a car you may not drive a lot, a marine battery is better suited because they are far less likely to be damaged by discharge like so many car batteries can be. A marine battery you can recharge when flat more times because of the heavier plates.It's hard to match that battery up to an automotive battery because of the car rating v. marine rating. I'm not saying it won't work, I'm just saying you can't compare the rating. 32° makes a huge difference in how a battery performs. From my understanding and buying a couple boat batteries, figure about a 25% difference. So that 800 marine rated battery ends up being a 600 CCA car rated battery with a one year warranty. Now you can compare and you are in the same ballpark in price.
Best battery deals I've come across come from two places..... One is the battery warehouse across town from me where they quite often sell batteries as "seconds" because of cosmetic issues. The other is the local "pick and pull". The last battery I had in my Corvette came from there and was bought for my son's car originally. I needed a battery after winter storage and that happened to be sitting in my garage after he totaled the car (hit a deer). That battery was less than $20 and lasted at least 4 years and was in the car when I sold it.
THe Advance battery listing is CCA on this battery when you look it up and read it, it says cranking amps is actually 1000 CA, and as i pointed out, having a car you may not drive a lot, a marine battery is better suited because they are far less likely to be damaged by discharge like so many car batteries can be. A marine battery you can recharge when flat more times because of the heavier plates.
I looked it up and read it.
Google marine cranking amperage versus cold cranking amps if you don't understand.
I'm out.....
I didnt realise that CCA wasnt the same as CCA, duh what was i thinking