I have been doing research on batteries for a Seafarer powered with a Yam 200 HP HPDI. The minimum battery requirements for this motor are 675.0 Marine Cranking Amps and 182 Minutes of Reserve Capacity (Owners Manuel). The Reserve Capacity is especially important in this particular motor.
Definition:
CCA vs. MCA: the two common power measurements are CCA (Cold Cranking Amps, the number of amps a battery can deliver for 30 seconds at 0°F while maintaining its voltage above 7.2 volts) and MCA (Marine Cranking Amps, similar but measured at 32°F instead of 0°F)
A minimum RC of 182 minutes is hard to find in any Group 24 battery, which is probably why you see so many Gradys (200 HPDI) equipped with the Deka Gp 27 or 31 or equivalent.
The Deka Gp 27 "starting" battery (27M6) has 840 CCA, 1050 MCA, and 182 RC, their "deep cycle" 27 (DC27) has 575 CCA, 705 CA, and 225 RC. And their GP 31 "deep cycle" (DC31DT) comes in at 650 CCA, 800 MCA, and 225 RC. I did not see a GP 31 "starting battery" in the Deka specs.
I can be convinced but at the moment I am not considering AGM technology because of the expense and with the type of boating that I do I will replace the batteries every 3-4 years anyway. After three years my confidence level begins to drop off, so I replace.
I am probably going to go with the Deka 27M6 on bank #1 (starting) and the DC31DT on bank 2 (house), providing there is enough space in the locker. If not the DC27 will be the #2.
Last piece of information; Deka makes the batteries for many marine battery retailers. For instance the West Marine (Marine Starting Battery, 1050MCA, Group 27) is the Deka 27M6, made in the same building, with a WM label. There are many familiar retailers that have this battery with their own label.
Definition:
CCA vs. MCA: the two common power measurements are CCA (Cold Cranking Amps, the number of amps a battery can deliver for 30 seconds at 0°F while maintaining its voltage above 7.2 volts) and MCA (Marine Cranking Amps, similar but measured at 32°F instead of 0°F)
A minimum RC of 182 minutes is hard to find in any Group 24 battery, which is probably why you see so many Gradys (200 HPDI) equipped with the Deka Gp 27 or 31 or equivalent.
The Deka Gp 27 "starting" battery (27M6) has 840 CCA, 1050 MCA, and 182 RC, their "deep cycle" 27 (DC27) has 575 CCA, 705 CA, and 225 RC. And their GP 31 "deep cycle" (DC31DT) comes in at 650 CCA, 800 MCA, and 225 RC. I did not see a GP 31 "starting battery" in the Deka specs.
I can be convinced but at the moment I am not considering AGM technology because of the expense and with the type of boating that I do I will replace the batteries every 3-4 years anyway. After three years my confidence level begins to drop off, so I replace.
I am probably going to go with the Deka 27M6 on bank #1 (starting) and the DC31DT on bank 2 (house), providing there is enough space in the locker. If not the DC27 will be the #2.
Last piece of information; Deka makes the batteries for many marine battery retailers. For instance the West Marine (Marine Starting Battery, 1050MCA, Group 27) is the Deka 27M6, made in the same building, with a WM label. There are many familiar retailers that have this battery with their own label.