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Guide · Batteries
Batteries Guide
Battery Sizing Basics: Ah, C-Rates and Runtime Explained
Amp-hours, C-rates and depth of discharge in plain language, with a simple method to size a battery for your load.
ATB Power · Battery Solutions · 6 min read
Sizing a battery comes down to a few numbers. Get these right and you avoid both under-sizing (short runtime, early failure) and over-paying for capacity you never use.
The key terms
- Capacity (Ah): amp-hours the battery can deliver at a stated rate, usually the 20-hour rate (C20).
- Energy (kWh): capacity times voltage. A 24 V, 100 Ah battery holds about 2.4 kWh.
- C-rate: charge or discharge current relative to capacity. 0.5C of a 100 Ah battery is 50 A.
- Depth of discharge (DoD): how much you use before recharging.
A simple sizing method
- 1. Add up the load in amps (or watts divided by voltage).
- 2. Multiply by the hours of runtime you need. That is the amp-hours used.
- 3. Divide by the usable fraction: about 0.5 for lead-acid, about 0.9 for lithium.
- 4. The result is the rated capacity to specify.
Worked example
A 10 A load for 5 hours is 50 Ah used. On lead-acid at 50% DoD, specify about 100 Ah. On lithium, about 55 to 60 Ah covers the same job.
Do not forget
- High discharge rates reduce usable capacity on lead-acid (Peukert effect); size up for heavy loads.
- Cold reduces capacity; size for the coldest expected operating temperature.
- Check the C-rate the equipment needs is within the battery rating.
Need help choosing or specifying?
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This guide is provided by ATB Power for general information. Figures are typical and may vary by model; always confirm against the specific product datasheet. © 2026 ATB Power.