I'm not sure on the difference in price in the Duracell. I have noticed in the last year or so, the Duracell 12V Group 24 sized deep cycle battery still advertises itself as an "80 amp hour" battery, where in many instances, other Group 24 sized batteries are "shrinking", often less than 65 amp hours. These are mostly the "auto store Marine/RV hybrid type batteries". So, even though the Duracell Group 24 battery can be more expensive than a Group 24 100 amp hour battery, if owners are dead set on staying with the AGM, the Duracell seems like you get what you pay for, which is the proper amount of amp hours that "Group 24" deep batteries used to have.
Many owners in the Forums have also installed "VMAX Tank" dual 6V batteries, and they fall in between the two prices you mention in your posts at 289. This is an Amazon link to them.
Thank you for taking the time to respond my question and provide the associated links. I will make the change to lithium the next battery change out, but for now will stay with AGM's.
Definitely stay away from AGM at this point. 5 years ago it made sense to keep using them but the price of lithium batteries has so drastically fallen that it just doesn’t make sense anymore. I have the LiTime batteries the past couple of seasons. The extra amp hours coupled with solar make these hard to beat for the price.
You may be confusing Lithium Phosphate and Lithium-Ion. We use LiFePO4's in our T@B's which are very safe. On the other hand, even AGM batteries can off gas under the right (wrong) situation. About the only justification for AGM is continuous extreme cold conditions, but even then a heated LiFePO4 might be a better alternative.
Stockton, New Jersey 2020 nuCamp T@B 320S * Jeep Wrangler 60,865 camping miles through the end of 2025
They recommend not charging your batteries in a wooden box including LiFePro.
This engineer is curious: which “they” says this?
LiFePO4 chemistry has none of the “thermal runaway” characteristics of lithium ion batteries; the latter are the type which can burn up and are nearly impossible to extinguish
I’ve never seen a manufacturer, seller, or internet “influencer” of LFP batteries recommend against using them in enclosed spaces.
I have seen people be confused in thinking that LFP have the overheating risks that Li-ion batteries do.
Charles & Judy, Santa Cruz, CA 2018 T@B 320 CS-S; Alde 3020; 4 cyl 2020 Subaru Outback Onyx XT
To answer the OP's actual question, Mighty Max batteries are made in Thailand while the Duracell are made by East Penn (AFAIK) in the US. Most people on this forum do not use lead-acid batteries anymore so I'd venture nobody has any hands-on experience.
@RayJim Thanks for the link and Happy Holidays! I am glad to see what other countries are doing about RV batteries and lithium in particular. I was not aware that there was a requirement for enclosure and for venting. Hoping someone with more knowledge can explain this further, as all the information I have read indicates that gas venting is not required. Not sure of the reasons. And I discarded my enclosed box in my 400 when I switched to the LiTime battery.
That article is focused on lithium ion batteries, not LiFePO4 batteries that typically go in trailers. Those requirements, including venting, are appropriate for lithium ion batteries.
There are numerous battery chemistries that use lithium and technically all of them are lithium ion batteries. In the US "lithium ion" typically refers to lithium cobalt oxide batteries which are the ones that have spectacular thermal runaways. Poking around Australian websites it appears they generally refer to lithium iron phosphate batteries simply as lithium ion. It's fair to assume the article refers to LiFePo batteries because that is what is typically used in RVs. I'd also assume that whoever wrote the government regulations has no clue about the specifics of the batteries and just did a copy/paste/edit of what was used for lead-acid batteries.
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Camper: nuCamp T@B 320S BBC | 12V 2x100Ah LiFePO4 | 600W Solar
Tow Vehicle: Jeep JLU Rubicon | 12V 100Ah LiFePO4 | 200W Solar
https://revkit.com/donmontalvo/ | https://donmontalvo.com
2020 Tacoma TRD Off-Road
2020 nuCamp T@B 320S * Jeep Wrangler
60,865 camping miles through the end of 2025
2018 T@B 320 CS-S; Alde 3020; 4 cyl 2020 Subaru Outback Onyx XT
Most people on this forum do not use lead-acid batteries anymore so I'd venture nobody has any hands-on experience.
Lithium Battery Guidelines for Installarion
2019 T@B400 Boondock Lite "Todd"
2025 Toyota Highlander 2.4L Turbo
Camper: nuCamp T@B 320S BBC | 12V 2x100Ah LiFePO4 | 600W Solar
Tow Vehicle: Jeep JLU Rubicon | 12V 100Ah LiFePO4 | 200W Solar
https://revkit.com/donmontalvo/ | https://donmontalvo.com
Ken / 2023 Tab 400 “La Bolita” (29,000+ miles) / 2024 Toyota Sequoia
2025 - 1 Trip - 25 nights - 2 National Parks