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Batteries Explained
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<blockquote data-quote="Thnking" data-source="post: 2409158" data-attributes="member: 571105"><p>Not very good at reading what I type are you:eyebrow:</p><p></p><p><em><strong>Nothing needs to be constant.. Specd capacity of a battery with a linear or non-linear discharge is a integration of an average energy vs time.</strong></em></p><p></p><p>Enough said.</p><p></p><p>It is only going to be a few percentage off at most, with a decent guess at average current. If someone really is clueless they can take a wild guess and bump load up 50% and they'll still be much closer to capacity than the spec'd AH rating.</p><p></p><p>The AH rating would be used for something like refrigerators in a RV. You're definitely a confused individual.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Thnking, post: 2409158, member: 571105"] Not very good at reading what I type are you:eyebrow: [I][B]Nothing needs to be constant.. Specd capacity of a battery with a linear or non-linear discharge is a integration of an average energy vs time.[/B][/I] Enough said. It is only going to be a few percentage off at most, with a decent guess at average current. If someone really is clueless they can take a wild guess and bump load up 50% and they'll still be much closer to capacity than the spec'd AH rating. The AH rating would be used for something like refrigerators in a RV. You're definitely a confused individual. [/QUOTE]
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