Good points.The big honking V8 in my Tundra (ok it was the itty bitty 4.6) was starting just fine on a 10 year old Panasonic. In winter no less with 5W30, regardless of ambient temps. Replaced proactively as it just seemed wrong to push my luck further.
But... the one time the battery drained down to 9V (no idea why, nothing was left on--and this was a few years before it was replaced), I gave it a jump from my running car. I hooked up the cables and went to check to see if the lights would come on. For no good reason I elected to just try the key--in years past, I would hook up the cables, and all I'd get was a click. Wait a few, then it would crank, but too slowly. Wait a few more, hope that it'd work this time...
What did it do? it simply fired up to life! Modern starters are reduction gear affairs and barely need anything it seems to crank the engine. And once it's running, the battery is just a big ole noise filter (assuming you aren't running a massive stereo).
So I don't worry about oversizing the battery all that much anymore, at least not if it's more modern. Not unless if peak loads are well past the alternator loading.
The one in my ECHO as well.And those Panasonic batteries were excellent. The one in our 94 Previa lasted well beyond a decade.
The maximum CCA battery choice may not be the best, if longer life is desired. Particularly when the battery is the same exact case size as a lower CCA battery. According to a blog post from a battery engineer, to get more cca, requires more lead plates. More plates packed tighly together in the same size case means they can more easily short out from sulfation. He said the lower cca battery may in some cases last longer than the higher cca battery when the case sizes are the same.So, whenever it needs a battery, I go for the max CCA's and try to find one with the pop tops so I can add water and check battery.
Yup, CCA is just a marketing gimmick. Higher CCA for the same sized battery requires more plate surface area, meaning thinner plates. When new, the higher CCA battery will provide better cold weather cranking performance, BUT if it's going to deteriorate faster than a lower CCA battery then is it really worth it.The maximum CCA battery choice may not be the best, if longer life is desired. Particularly when the battery is the same exact case size as a lower CCA battery. According to a blog post from a battery engineer, to get more cca, requires more lead plates. More plates packed tighly together in the same size case means they can more easily short out from sulfation. He said the lower cca battery may in some cases last longer than the higher cca battery when the case sizes are the same.
Going up a size to gain more cca would be an acceptable solution, if the space exists. Or a change in technology. Many higher performing AGMs have greater CCA than their flooded counterparts (not in all cases though).Yup, CCA is just a marketing gimmick. Higher CCA for the same sized battery requires more plate surface area, meaning thinner plates. When new, the higher CCA battery will provide better cold weather cranking performance, BUT if it's going to deteriorate faster than a lower CCA battery then is it really worth it.
Also, even if you got the lowest CCA rated battery for any particular size, chances are that CCA rating already far exceeds what the starter needs even in the worst cold start situation so why get more CCA than necessary if it's going to come at a cost of less durable plates.