Battery Types Explained

Most vehicles use one of three battery technologies, and the right one depends on what the vehicle demands and your budget. Picking correctly affects starting reliability, lifespan, and how well the battery copes with modern electrical loads.

The three types

Type Strengths Trade-offs
Flooded lead-acid Cheapest, proven, widely available Heavier, shorter life, can vent gas
AGM Sealed, durable, handles deep cycling Costs more
Lithium (LiFePO₄) Lightest, longest life, fast charging Most expensive; needs cold-weather care

Flooded lead-acid is the traditional, budget option still fine for many older cars. AGM (absorbent glass mat) batteries are sealed, vibration-resistant, and built to handle the heavy, repeated loads of vehicles with stop-start systems and lots of electronics — many such cars require AGM. Lithium (usually LiFePO₄ in automotive use) is light and very long-lived, popular in performance and powersports builds, at a clear price premium.

Match the battery to the car: a vehicle designed for AGM should get AGM — downgrading can shorten life and confuse the charging system. Always match the group size, terminal layout, and cold-cranking amps (CCA) your vehicle specifies.

Frequently asked questions

Is AGM better than flooded? It’s more durable and handles heavy loads better, at a higher cost.

Can I replace flooded with AGM? Often yes; replacing AGM with flooded is not recommended.

What’s CCA? Cold-cranking amps — the battery’s cold starting power; match the spec.

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