My Crowns are the 115 a/h rated group 27's, this is my second set. I prematurely killed the first set by letting them get too low on water. I left them for a month uncycled without lowering my solar acceptance and float voltages. This set I'm now using also saw some mistreatment and premature capacity lost due to overcharging, but are still powering all my needs, at least for 4 months either side of the summer solstice.<br><br>I think it is the combination of quenching them with large amperages in the morning and physical agitation of the electrolyte from driving, which seems to make them happier than if the solar alone returns them to full charge, slower. I know that every source says slower recharging is better for the battery, but that just is not my experience in this lifestyle. Any time a battery is discharged it is sulfated. It is when they sit discharged too deeply and too long that the sulfates on the plate harden, requiring more drastic measures to break them up, or break them off and allow them to settle on the bottom of a flooded cell. Perhaps the 50+ amps per battery for a few minutes in the morning just shocks the sulfate back into solution. 50+ amps per battery is pretty rare, requiring the engine/ alternator cold and near 3000 rpm. More usual is 30 to 40 per battery until 14.5v is reached, but at cold idle 52 to 62 amps is all they get, hot idle 32 amps is all they get. 100+ amps will cause my single v belt to squeal in protest.<br><br>I'm actually thinking about reducing my overall capacity on the next pair of batteries as it is rare for me to use all I have, and I live in a sunny climate. Really concentrating on weight reduction<br><br>I got most all my solar equipment shipped from AZ wind and sun, but the unisolar 68 watter came from Amazon. They certainly have good prices on the Iota's. I might get the 45 too.