
Big Bertha came with Absorbent Glass Mat (AGM) lead acid batteries when we bought her in 2018 and we replaced these with another set of AGMs in Namibia in 2022. They have served us well. Lead acid batteries are very robust but have two inherent disadvantages in our application:
Lithium Iron Phosphate (LFP) batteries do not have these disadvantages; they can be discharged to 0% (realistically 10% to avoid power outages) without impact on their capacity/lifetime and have a very low internal resistance, meaning they accept a high charge current right up to 100% SoC.
But they have their own disadvantages:
An infringement of any of these limitations will likely damage the battery. This requires management by a Battery Management System (BMS), often internal to the battery.
Dave decided to upgrade to a 24V 314ah LFP battery instead of continuing with AGM batteries for several reasons:
Supporting modifications:
Initial Impressions
The LFP charges fast all the way to 100% SoC – there is no slowing down over the last 20%. The DC/DC charger can provide 50A and if we have discharged to nearly empty, charging will take 300ah/50A = 6 hours to charge. A day’s driving. We normally only discharge to 85% over night, so that will be 45ah/50A = 1 hour’s drive!
The LFP will come into its own on a dark dingy day when the solar charging is marginal. We should be able to survive two days without charging now. And if stationary, the petrol genset and inverter/charger will recharge the LFP in no time. We will report back later…
Thank You
We have to thank Fabi and Chris for being able to stay with them in Las Vegas. We we were able to put our food in their fridge, stay in their house, use Chris’s workshop and Chris helped manhandle the heavy batteries. It would have been a difficult task without their help.




Good upgrade, easier to do in the USA than other places.
And cheaper…
Great have caught up and in the loop again! Ask Fabi and Chris if they are open to your friends to visit, I want to go back!!! Only joking!! What a fun city with good golf courses too!! Awaiting your next adventure!
Hi it’s really helpful to see how you manage on the road. We use a lithium battery plus solar power and rarely plug in anywhere. Though you have more truck to charge than we do! Good luck with the rest of America.
You clever chap Dave!
The technicalities went way over our heads, 🤪
But there seems to be more advantages than not with lithium.
We use four LiFePO4 house batteries on our yacht, with the same Victron charge controllers (MPT, Orion) that you have. I find their resilience amazing, after years of wearing out AGMs. Also, now that I’ve upgraded our solar panels, they never seem to dip below 90% charge whatever we do (especially if we happen to run the engine for a short while to heat the shower).
Hi Reinhard, so far so good. My only concern is when the battery BMS turns charging off. I think that is quite hard on the inverter/charger. I need to tune the I/C to got to float before the battery turns itself off.
Good Lord – you really ARE a chap to go into the jungle with! Is there nothing you can’t ‘Just Fix’, probably with one arm tied behind your back????
Very very informative. I wish I had a need to employ all that new knowledge.
And to learn that your yachting acolytes share your maintenance needs and fixes, too – invaluable gen!
Great photos, too – Many thanks to you both….
Thank you Victor! Finally, my electrical and electronic engineering degree pays dividends!!