All.
I had a Bavaria 32 -2003 for 12 years. It was originally fitted with one Bosch 180ah on the domestic. As I added various electrical equipment such as Radar, twin plotters, inverter, I found that the battery life was much reduced. I then added a second lead acid flooded battery in parallel. Fine until I sold it in 2015. The charge splitter fitted to the boat from Bavaria was the diode type. These diodes have an internal resistance that cause a 0.5 volt drop through the splitter. Not much you may say but its enough to prevent full charging from the alternator.
I would recommend the Merlin alternator booster its pretty simple to fit but does require removal of the alternator and some soldering. The sense wire can then go to the domestic positive on the splitter on the battery side this overcome the volt drop and helps the alternator to achieve the correct voltage to fully charge the battery. the Merlin effectively turns you alternator in to a 5 stage charger adjusting the output from the field windings to give the fastest charge without damaging the battery.
Batteries will deteriorate with time. The cheapest may have 400 charge cycles and the more expensive may be 1000 cycles. But cold bad charging and over discharging will kill them quicker. Its not just down to the quality of the battery. all batteries will sulphate and this simply clogs the plates preventing the chemical reaction of charging and dis-charging from being fully effective. in short they loose their ability to hold the full charge.
I would recommend all boat owners to fit a battery desulfator and reconditioner like this one;
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/252120721226?_trksid=p2057872.m2749.l2649&ssPageName=STRK%3AMEBIDX%3AITI used a Stirling version which worked well on the 32 they defiantly extend the life of your batteries by pulsing a high frequency (10,000Htz) through the battery(s) which breaks up the sulphate crystals.
Before you start to worry about chargers, test the battery. If its 5 years + old it will certainly be down to 60% of its stated capacity. Less if it has been heavily used, discharged below 40% of its capacity a few times or left at less than 75% charge for some time.
To test your battery it needs to have been fully charged and left to settle for at least and hour as described in the previous post. Voltage is not a good way to fully asses a batteries ability to provide power (amps) that's because the voltage can be high but the capacity low. you need to drop test the battery, apply a known load for a period of time to give you an indication of capacity.
You can use a drop tester. These are cheap say £30 or less from someone like machine mart (I have one if someone wants to borrow it) but better still is to apply a low load say 5 amps for 10 hours while measuring the voltage drop. The load should technically be adjusted as the voltage falls but for a simple test a 4-5 amp halogen headlamp bulb will probably do the trick or give you an indication of the capacity.
A new battery or one that's not old is not an indication of it's capacity. On my new Bavaria cruiser 37 (1 year old) I have had to scrap 2 of the Exide AGM batteries and replace them!! (£260.00 each). Even the de-sulphator would not bring them back. Exide batteries will not answer my mails or the two letters I have sent them. That should give you an indication of their belief in their product and why I will never buy another Exide battery.
I have replaced the two Exide withy AGM's from Ebay. 2 x 100 ah AGM's for £189.00 the pair.
My tips for long battery life would be;
You need twice the capacity you think you do.
Work out your daily consumption get twice the ah you use in your battery bank fitted
Get a NASA BM2 battery monitor with a 200 amp shunt fit it and keep an eye on your battery usage
Never discharge batteries below 11 volts or 50% of their capacity in ah
Use every opportunity to charge them
Get yourself a solar panel and use it (I have 2 x110 watt and they make a big difference)
I have an article half written on the woes of Batteries and the issues we had with them on Impavidus. I am just waiting a bit longer for a response from Exide or Bavaria before I publish.
There is lots of technical stuff I could add or explain but I have tried to keep it so the non electrical minded get an overview.
Hope this is useful
Ant.