My battery died (can’t get above 10.5V, loosing voltage while sitting etc) and I need to get a new one. What should I look out for? There are a lot of different types of them like AGM, Lithium Iron, Flooded Acid etc

Car is Integra (1998)

  • @sleepmode@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Lead acid is fine. I’d get the cheapest one you can find with OEM- level cold cranking amps. Otherwise they’re almost all the same and made by basically 3 or so companies. Ignore the marketing.

    AGMs are very durable and tolerant of poor maintenance but you pay for it.

      • @haych
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        21 year ago

        I ran Varta on my Corsa, no complaints. I got it for a good price and never failed me.

      • @sleepmode@lemmy.world
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        21 year ago

        Varta makes the Bosch batteries we get. I think they’re owned by Johnson Controls, but that’s their only involvement. Solid bet IMO. Well-made and reliable.

        • @spider@lemmy.nz
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          1 year ago

          I think they’re owned by Johnson Controls

          Johnson sold their battery division to Clarios in 2019.

          (Varta is now a Clarios brand.)

    • @Synthead@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Just make sure to keep it charged and use it occasionally. The electrolyte will crystalize to the lead if the battery is left in a discharged state for a long time, which will make the battery weaker or inoperable. If you keep it charged, your battery will last for decades.

  • @Schmuppes@lemmy.world
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    61 year ago

    I’m not knowledgeable to get into the specifics of the differences, but for your older Integra with a gasoline engine, a regular lead-acid battery will suffice. You don’t need lean angles (like AGM for motorcycles or off road applications) and you don’t need other special properties that vehicles with Start-Stop would require. Basically all you need to look for is the specified amperage/capacity and form format. Don’t spend a whole lot; the right battery for your car will probably be under 100 Dollars and last somewhere between 5 and 10-12 years, depending on which price bracket and quality level you opt for.

    • @ThatRocco@lemmy.world
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      31 year ago

      I’d just like to add to this and recommend interstate batteries. They are a little bit more than house brand, but are much higher quality. For example: Every duralast brand battery I’ve bought started leaking after ~ 3 years. The last interstate I bought lasted for ~ 8 years/90k miles and was like $40 more than the cheapest battery