I read this while looking for a battery for my 2002 C5...
"Spiral Wound/AGM batteries have different (a lower maximum threshhold) charging requirements than regular lead acid batteries, and simply changing from lead acid to a SW/AGM battery without registering the change in your car's computer system so that it charges properly, will lead to drastically shortened life. The registration generally needs to be done by the dealer with specialized diagnostic tools.
I suspect the people who complain that the battery is junk and doesn't last replaced a used lead acid battery with this spiral wound/AGM version and didn't have the dealer register the change in the cars computer. In older vehicles (mid to early 2000's) the systems don't have the ability to distinguish between batteries and alter their charging characteristics, so consequently the battery is guaranteed to overcharge and fail in a relatively short time."
Does this make any sense?
"Spiral Wound/AGM batteries have different (a lower maximum threshhold) charging requirements than regular lead acid batteries, and simply changing from lead acid to a SW/AGM battery without registering the change in your car's computer system so that it charges properly, will lead to drastically shortened life. The registration generally needs to be done by the dealer with specialized diagnostic tools.
I suspect the people who complain that the battery is junk and doesn't last replaced a used lead acid battery with this spiral wound/AGM version and didn't have the dealer register the change in the cars computer. In older vehicles (mid to early 2000's) the systems don't have the ability to distinguish between batteries and alter their charging characteristics, so consequently the battery is guaranteed to overcharge and fail in a relatively short time."
Does this make any sense?