VRLA vs Flooded Lead Acid: Which Is Right for Your Application?

VRLA (Valve-Regulated Lead Acid) and Flooded Lead Acid (FLA) represent two fundamentally different approaches to containing electrolyte. Understanding the tradeoffs is essential for anyone designing a battery-powered system.

Flooded Lead Acid: Maximum Performance, Regular Maintenance

FLA batteries use liquid electrolyte requiring regular watering. They offer the best cycle life in controlled environments where maintenance is performed regularly. Best for off-grid solar with maintenance access, forklifts, golf carts, and floor care machines.

VRLA (AGM/Gel): Sealed, Maintenance-Free

AGM batteries absorb electrolyte in a glass mat; Gel batteries suspend it in silica gel. Both are sealed, spill-proof, and install in any orientation. The default choice for most modern applications.

Key Comparisons

  • Maintenance: FLA requires regular watering; VRLA none
  • Orientation: FLA must stay upright; VRLA any angle
  • Self-discharge: FLA 4-6%/month; VRLA 1-3%/month
  • Cycle life: FLA 600-1000 cycles at 50% DoD; VRLA AGM 400-800 cycles
  • Upfront cost: FLA 20-40% cheaper than VRLA equivalents
  • Ventilation: FLA releases hydrogen, needs ventilation; VRLA minimal gas

When to Choose VRLA

Choose VRLA for maintenance-difficult locations, mobile applications, enclosed indoor spaces, and anywhere sealed batteries are preferred for safety reasons.

For product specifications: sales@chisen.cn

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