American Locomotive
Well-known member
"Cycled", in this case means fully charged/discharged. Bleeding off some % of the battery, then charging it back up isn't considered a cycle, only a partial cycle. Most battery companies seem to consider it pretty linear - i.e., if you only use 1/4 of the charge, it counts as 1/4 of a cycle.They are also cycled frequently. Often several times per day.
I don't know what OP's hourly energy demands are, but I would assume they would decrease at night. You can also do simple, cheap changes to reduce battery demand. For example, If he has pure resistance water heating, he could put a timer on it so it only runs during the day when the solar is producing.
That is a very valid point. I would hope OP chose a reputable and long-lived solar company.Those "warranty" solutions are only as good as the company installing them - solar companies come and go. Good luck going directly to EG-4 (they're actually a China company selling under several brands). Just importing them alone (direct) is a huge pain in the *** and they're not going to cover the costs to ship them over on a boat or the associated tariff.