My Hyundai came with a AGM, and I am on my second one, and my battery meter already says I need a new one and it is one year old. So I started charging it every other day and it goes back and forth from from good to replace. I am a short tripper and with me going daily to my daughters house to renovating it 25 mins away, so I can't blame short tripping.
I had a 11 lbs AGM racing battery and it doesn't like to "take a charge " well, same with my OE style AGM. They are slow excepting of "the charge". I read somewhere that is the bad side of the AGM MO.(modus operandi).
My Hyundai alternator puts out 14.1 to 14.6. My newer AGM when kept up and manually charger as an internal resistance of between 3.75 to 5.30 NOW. It was only at a 45% health and 55% charge. LIke I said, the AGMs in my car just don't quick charge like a regular flooded lead acid. The battery will last 3+ years like this, but it is beating itself up with no solid charge by the alternator. I have a Big Three cable system installed with large and multi cables of very high end copper and all connections are anti-oxed. I do know this battery likes my 40 amp garage style 15.9 volt charger. I have 3 different AGM chargers and both those have been tested on this battery. I am using those for my every other day charging routine. Two are PulseTech chargers, the other is a high end Minkota AGM charger.
I think my next battery for winter will be a quality flooded lead acid conventional battery. I myself am not impressed with AGMs, or at least the plate style. I have to research if the spirial ones except a charge faster and better. I am still in research mode with my battery.
I question if Hyundai even has a AGM algorithm, it would not surprise me if they DID NOTHING to get a proper charging program for a AMG battery.