It's barely been used. It has sat mostly without any care. It may very well be that the newer, smaller Wal-Mart marine battery is doing all the work now, which might account for why it seems like the battery bank isn't holding as much charge as it was a month ago. It may not by holding as well as it should in general, having 2 batteries (different sizes, 27 and 24 or so). However, I don't have as much sun in the afternoon as I did at the other RV park I was at so that may be a factor as well. I'm going to check the old Diehard battery's water levels ASAP once I get some distilled water.<br><br>I may just have to get another marine battery in the meantime. In a year, I might have to replace it again but for $100 to stay off the grid mostly for a year, it'll tide me over since I don't really want to have to rebuild the battery box right now. Plus to get a pair of Trojan 6V batteries would cost 3x as much as a cheap marine battery, so cost is a major factor right now too. Unless I have a serious drop in capacity, I'm doing for the moment. But I need to keep it in mind that I may have to buy a new battery at the drop of a hat.<br><br>I need to get on an earlier wake up schedule so I don't have to power as much after dark which will help some. It's 9am and my current voltage reading at the 12v outlet strip next to me shows 12.9V. When I went to bed around 1am, it was at 12.2. Between about 6 or 7pm (when there is no more direct sunlight and the battery level is about 12.6v) and 1am, all I ran was my LED lights and the in-wall exhaust fan over the the stove while cooking. The fan pulls a LOT of power though. Even so, it all seems to drain down the battery bank faster than it probably should. The LED lights are the biggest LED clusters I could find to fit in 1156 sockets and inside the covers, about 2-4 of them running at a time. Having 4 of them on still pulls less juice than a single, regular 1156 though. I like a lot of light - but also and I forget to turn off the others I don't need behind and to the side of me.<br><br>I keep watch on the charge state from time to time with a plug in 12v voltage meter in the power strip next to me.