No, that is not what I said. And it is not correct- flooded cell, gel cell, AGM and 'fakey' AGM batteries all use the same chemistry, lead- acid.
What I said was that any "AGM" battery that comes with separate acid that the user installs is not the same technology as a true AGM battery. It is nothing but a flooded cell battery with glass mat between the plates. AGM batteries behave the way they do not because of the mat, but because the mat allows the use of so little acid.
By the way, one of the big benifits to AGM batteries is that they do not self- discharge nearly as fast as flooded cell batteries and have extremely long shelf- lives. And again, because of the construction mechanism, not the chemistry type.
Again, I am merely pointing out the difference so that anyone can see what is going on here. By all means, purchase and use whichever one(s) you want. My only goal was to shine a little illumination onto what the differences in the battery types (again, not the chemistry but rather the construction and resulting behavior).
Brian
Mehhhhh,
You are splitting hairs with the "flakey fake AGM" line....
It is truly an AGM battery just the same as a factory activated and sealed batt... only difference is that it can sit unactivated indefinatly within reason, on a shelf... period. The internal construction is no different than a presealed unit. I have cut one (sealed AGM Batt) open to verify this before, and the guts are the same.
I just purchased and activated an
Exide AGM yesterday, and I could clearly see the guts thru the filler holes. After the fill, and bench sit time, there was
no liquids visible whatsoever, even tilting and shaking the batt, prior to installing the permenant caps before doing the charge cycle....
Well report on longevity when it wears out....I'll say the Scorpion sealed AGM unit I just replaced lasted only 2years, and my fault for not keeping the tender on it last arctic winter.....