Depth of Discharge (DoD) is the single most important battery concept for buyers to understand. Getting DoD right is the difference between a battery lasting 1 year versus 5 years in the same application.
What Is DoD?
DoD measures how much of a battery’s rated capacity is used before recharging. Discharging a 100Ah battery to 50Ah remaining = 50% DoD. The deeper the discharge, the fewer total cycles the battery will deliver before capacity degrades.
DoD vs Cycle Life: The Critical Relationship
For quality VRLA AGM batteries, approximate cycle life at different DoD levels:
- 100% DoD: 150-250 cycles
- 80% DoD: 300-400 cycles
- 50% DoD: 600-800 cycles
- 30% DoD: 1,200-1,500 cycles
- 20% DoD: 2,000+ cycles
Operating at 50% DoD delivers 3-5x more cycles than running to 100% DoD.
Practical DoD Guidelines by Application
- Daily solar cycling: 30-50% DoD maximum for longest life
- E-bike: 50-70% DoD acceptable for daily commuting
- E-rickshaw: Size for 60-70% DoD on a typical workday
- Backup/UPS: 0-20% DoD, batteries remain on float charge most of the time
Why DoD Limits Matter More Than Capacity
A 100Ah battery used at 50% DoD delivers the same usable energy as a 50Ah battery at 100% DoD — but the 100Ah battery will last 3-5x longer. Spending more upfront for a larger battery bank is almost always cheaper than replacing smaller batteries more frequently.
For DoD optimization support: sales@chisen.cn
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