No. What I’m saying is that when I 1st started using the agm charger after using the standard agm for months, the process took several hours. This could have been after a few hour drive or an all day trip. Now those same trips take just an hour or so to reach full charge. The battery tests 100% for state of health and over 100cca than advertised. I think after a few months of using it, there is a more complete charge on the battery.Are you saying that when the battery is discharged it is now taking half as long to run the full charge cycle to the point where it goes to float? That wouldn't be good, that would mean the battery is losing capacity so the same amount of current "charges" it faster.
If the battery has been on a charger or driven recently it is a good idea to turn on the headlights for a while (30s, 60s?) to bleed off the surface charge. Then wait around 5 minutes for it to recover. (This assumes a temperature like 25C, it probably needs much longer if the battery is cold.) Then once the battery voltage bears some relation to the actual SOC attach the charger. For instance, the BatteryTender Jr. will go straight to float on a battery if this isn't done, even if the actual SOC is way below 100%. The Harbor Freight 4A charger (it isn't really) had the same problem. I think that all chargers should do that themselves - if it sees a ~100% SOC voltage pull some current out, let the battery recover, then decide what to do. Many, perhaps most, don't.
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