Part 1
Is lithium worth it?
Start here. This part covers the one idea everything rests on, why people switch, the honest trade-offs, and a side-by-side table so you can decide with eyes open.
The one fact it all turns on: a 12V LiFePO4 battery gives you roughly twice the usable energy, a third of the weight, and ten times the cycle life of the lead-acid it replaces. So you usually buy a smaller amp-hour number and still get more out of it. An 80Ah lead-acid only gives about 40Ah usable at 50 percent depth of discharge, which a 50Ah lithium beats outright.
Why people switch
Twice the usable capacity
Lead-acid should only be drawn to about 50 percent. Lithium safely delivers 80 to 90 percent, so one lithium does the work of two lead batteries of the same rating.
A fraction of the weight
A 100Ah 12V lithium weighs about 11 to 14 kg. The lead-acid equivalent is 27 to 32 kg. Big for van payload and boat waterline.
Lasts far longer
Lead-acid lasts roughly 200 to 400 cycles. Lithium delivers 2,000 to 5,000, and around 10 years instead of 3 to 5.
Charges much faster
Lithium recharges in 1 to 2 hours. Lead-acid needs 6 to 10 with a slow tail. A big deal for solar and alternator charging.
Holds up under load
Under heavy inverter loads lead-acid can lose a third of its capacity. Lithium holds its rating, and a flat voltage keeps lights bright until nearly empty.
Cheaper over its life
Despite the sticker price, lithium runs near $0.06 per cycle versus about $1 for AGM, and it is sealed and maintenance free.
The honest trade-offs, and how each is fixed
Higher upfront price
Roughly $200 to $400 for a 100Ah lithium versus $150 to $250 for AGM.
It will not charge below freezing
Lithium must not be charged below 0C. Discharging in the cold is fine.
Charger and alternator profiles
Lead-acid chargers can mis-charge lithium, and a stock alternator has no current limit for it.
Voltage does not show charge
The flat voltage that is a pro also makes state of charge impossible to read from voltage alone.
Side by side
| Spec | Lead-acid (AGM / flooded) | LiFePO4 lithium |
|---|---|---|
| Nominal voltage | 12.0 V | 12.8 V |
| Usable depth of discharge | about 50% | 80 to 90% |
| Usable Wh per 100Ah | 510 to 640 Wh | 1,024 to 1,150 Wh |
| Weight per 100Ah | 27 to 32 kg | 11 to 14 kg |
| Cycle life | 200 to 400 (500 premium) | 2,000 to 5,000 |
| Calendar life | 3 to 5 yr | about 10 yr |
| Max charge rate | 0.1 to 0.2C | 0.5 to 1C |
| Charge time empty to full | 6 to 10 h | 1 to 2 h |
| Maintenance | watering / venting (flooded) | sealed, none |
Part 2
Which setup is yours?
The battery is the same idea everywhere, but the charge sources and the watch-outs differ. Find your world and read the one that fits.
Marine
Default 2 days autonomyWeight comes off the waterline, the bank recharges fast at anchor, and a sealed pack means no gassing in a cabin locker.
Watch out for
Alternator overheating on bigger banks, so use an external regulator or a DC-DC charger. Follow ABYC-style fusing, and keep the engine start battery on lead or a dedicated isolated lithium.
Campervan and RV
Default 2 days autonomyMore payload, fast charging from both solar and the alternator while you drive, and enough usable capacity for an induction hob or air conditioning.
Watch out for
A DC-DC charger is the right way to charge from the alternator, as it protects the alternator and applies the correct lithium profile. For winter use, choose a self-heating pack.
Off-grid solar
Default 3 days autonomyDeep daily cycling with no wear, high round-trip efficiency, and fewer panels needed because there is no slow absorption tail wasting your sun window.
Watch out for
Size for cloudy-day autonomy, often 3 days or more. Set the MPPT controller to a lithium profile with a low or no float. Gentle 0.2C charging is fine here.
Part 3
What to change before you swap
A battery that fits the tray is not automatically plug and play. Many lithium batteries match a BCI Group 24, 27 or 31 footprint, so they physically drop in, but whether they work correctly is a separate question. Here is each thing to set or fit.
1. Your charger
Lithium wants 14.2 to 14.6V for bulk and absorption, and a low or no float at or below 13.6V. AGM and gel charger profiles usually fall inside that window and are fine. Plain flooded and wet profiles charge higher, around 14.8 to 15.0V, and can drive the BMS to disconnect. Equalization and desulfation modes pulse 15 to 16V and are harmful, so they must be off.
2. Alternator charging, the big one
Never wire lithium straight to a vehicle or engine alternator. Stock alternators have the wrong profile and no current limit. Lithium has very low internal resistance and can pull enough current to overheat or destroy an alternator, and a sudden BMS disconnect can spike and damage it too.
3. Solar controller
Set your MPPT or PWM controller to the lithium voltage, around 14.4V for a 12V pack, and disable float. Lead-acid float settings would hold a lithium pack at the wrong voltage. Lithium suits solar well, because its fast acceptance captures more of a short sun window.
4. Fusing and wiring
Lithium delivers far higher current than lead. Verify your cable gauge is adequate for the loads and charge rates you will actually run, and fit a correctly rated main fuse close to the battery. An undersized cable or fuse is a fire risk, not just a performance one.
5. A battery monitor
Lithium holds a flat voltage across most of its discharge, so you cannot read state of charge from voltage alone the way you could with lead. A shunt-based monitor sits on the negative lead, so every amp in and out passes through it, and gives you a true state of charge.
6. Do not mix
Never run lithium in parallel or series with lead-acid, and do not mix makes, sizes or ages within one bank. They charge and discharge differently, so a mixed bank works the weakest battery to death. Keep the engine start battery separate, either as lead or a dedicated lithium start battery with isolation.
7. Cold weather charging
Do not charge lithium below 0C. A good BMS blocks it to protect the cells. Discharging in the cold is fine, so the issue is only charging. If you will charge in sub-freezing conditions, plan for it rather than discovering the pack will not take a charge on a winter morning.
8. The BMS, and matching it to your loads
Every lithium battery has a battery management system built in. It protects against over and under voltage, over-current, short circuit and temperature extremes, and balances the cells. It is a safety backstop, not a charge terminator. Choose a battery whose continuous BMS rating comfortably covers your biggest combined charge and discharge current, including inverter loads and fast charging.
Ready to see your match?
Tell the tool the battery you run now and get the exact lithium that replaces it, the weight you save, and whether it fits.
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