I have this to say about lead acid batteries. Many, many, are very similar.
A wal-mart battery is likely made by Gould National or a similar
manufacturer. As are Auto Zone, Napa, etc.
When I went to General Motors Training, GM Delco Division still made
their batteries. Our instructor told us that the heavier the battery was,
the better it was. GM built their batteries with a higher fluid reserve
than many others. Also, their plates were attached by the shortest path
possible between cells, and they were suspended quite a ways from the
bottom of the battery case. Also as shock resistant to jarring, and
vibration as they could engineer them. They also were more expensive than
many others, which they attributed to using all virgin materials, not
recycled lead. I always thought they made a superior product. Don't know
about how they do it today.
Jim Hupy
Salem, Oregon
On Wed, Jun 24, 2020, 1:11 PM John Phillips via Gmclist <
> I have a 1975 Avion VIN A26000 built on a 1974 chassis. The leads to the
> rear house batteries are #10 which are about 30 feet long. I do not think
> the rear house batteries could start the engine without the front house
> 12-volt battery. The front house battery is a dual purpose battery, high
> cranking amps that can start an engine and still do deep cycle.
>
> On Wed, Jun 24, 2020 at 12:24 PM Emery Stora via Gmclist <
>
> > John
> > That is not necessarily true. My 1977 GMC has a much larger cable to the
> > up front boost solenoid and is more than adequate to start my engine.
> > What year do you have? Perhaps a prior owner modified yours.
> > In addition to the large factory installed wire from the rear boost
> > solenoid to the front solenoid, I added a #10 gauge wire to the front
> from
> > the smart charger that I had installed a long time ago. That wire will
> > charge the front battery from my Statpower charger but is not used for a
> > boost. Are you sure that you don’t have a larger wire from the rear bank
> > to the front bank?
> >
> > Emery Stora
> > 77 Kingsley
> > Frederick, CO
> >
> > > On Jun 24, 2020, at 12:19 PM, John Phillips via Gmclist <
> > >
> > > You need the house battery upfront if you are going to use the house
> > > battery to start the engine if the chassis battery fails. My coach has
> > > about # 10 wire between the house banks and that is not enough to start
> > an
> > > engine from the rear house battery.
> > >
> > > On Wed, Jun 24, 2020 at 9:50 AM Thom High via Gmclist <
> > >
> > >>> Keep the 2 6V house batteries in back series wired as one 12V
> battery.
> > >> Up front run just one Group 78 battery. (If the GM side terminals
> have
> > >>> been removed by PO you will need a dual or top post engine battery).
> > >> Available with 850CCA and over 1000CA there is no reason to parallel 2
> > >> engine
> > >>> batteries. Paralleling creates a hazard, shortens battery life, and
> > >> presents an unnecessary constant load to alternator, even when they
> are
> > >> fully
> > >>> charged.
> > >>
> > >> So do i only need one battery up front?
> > >>
> > >>
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> > >
> > >
> > > --
> > >
> > > *John Phillips*
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> --
>
> *John Phillips*
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