<font color=blue>What really shortens the life of lead acid batteries is deep cycling them. A shallow drain has little effect. (researched a bunch of this when I was looking at setting up my new house "off-the-grid" using wind and solar power to charge a bank of batteries).</font color=blue>
Bingo!!!!!!!
It isn't the shallow drain that gets you. It is the combination of shallow drain and then cranking the engine that gets you. Deep cycling is precisely what you are doing when you drain 6amps from your cranking battery for an hour and then hit it with a big amp drain when you start your engine. It is a drain/recharge cycle that your cranking battery isn't designed to handle. That is why campers use auxiliary batteries isolated from the cranking system to run 12v electrical accessories.
I went through 2 Die Hards in 2 years before I figured out it was the drain my radar detector was placing on the battery that was killing them. It was pluged into an auxiliary plug that powered it all night. Every morning I was cranking with a battery that was not fully charged, ie, I was deep cycling the battery more than it was designed to.
The two worse things you can do to a battery is undercharge and overcharge. A shallow drain before you crank the starter is the same thing as undercharge.
Bingo!!!!!!!
It isn't the shallow drain that gets you. It is the combination of shallow drain and then cranking the engine that gets you. Deep cycling is precisely what you are doing when you drain 6amps from your cranking battery for an hour and then hit it with a big amp drain when you start your engine. It is a drain/recharge cycle that your cranking battery isn't designed to handle. That is why campers use auxiliary batteries isolated from the cranking system to run 12v electrical accessories.
I went through 2 Die Hards in 2 years before I figured out it was the drain my radar detector was placing on the battery that was killing them. It was pluged into an auxiliary plug that powered it all night. Every morning I was cranking with a battery that was not fully charged, ie, I was deep cycling the battery more than it was designed to.
The two worse things you can do to a battery is undercharge and overcharge. A shallow drain before you crank the starter is the same thing as undercharge.