Heavy-Duty Truck Battery Standards — A Buyer's Guide for Export Markets
Truck batteries fail differently than car batteries. Specifying the wrong CCA, plate thickness, or hold-down system creates costly fleet-wide warranty claims. Here's what export buyers should evaluate.
Why truck batteries need their own playbook
A passenger car battery and a heavy-duty truck battery look superficially similar but face fundamentally different duty cycles:
| Metric | Passenger Car | Heavy-Duty Truck |
|---|---|---|
| Daily engine starts | 4–8 | 8–20 |
| Cranking current | 200–500 A | 600–1000 A |
| Operating hours/day | 1–2 | 12–18 |
| Engine compartment temp | 60–80°C | 80–110°C |
| Vibration exposure | Low | Continuous, high amplitude |
| Sleeper cab parasitic load | None | 30–50A overnight (TV, fridge, AC, charging) |
| Service environment | Climate-controlled | Open lots, dust, salt, mud |
A “passenger car style” battery installed in a heavy truck will fail in 4–8 months. Specifying for trucks requires a different lens.
The five things to evaluate
1. Cold Cranking Amps (CCA) headroom
A 12L diesel engine at -18°C draws 700–900 A for 1–2 seconds. The battery rating must exceed this with 30%+ headroom. Common heavy-duty CCA targets:
- 100–135Ah class: 800–950 CCA minimum
- 150–180Ah class: 900–1100 CCA
- 200Ah+ class: 1000–1200 CCA
Lower CCA ratings indicate thinner plates or lower active material density — both predict early failure under heavy-duty duty.
2. Plate thickness and grid alloy
Heavy-duty batteries should use:
- Thick plates (≥ 2.0mm positive) for vibration resistance
- Calcium-calcium grid alloy for low water loss in maintenance-free designs
- Antimony-alloy plates acceptable for refillable conventional designs in regions with electrolyte service
Avoid thin-plate “passenger car carryover” designs sold as “heavy-duty” — they save factory cost but fail in service.
3. Hold-down and case construction
Vibration kills truck batteries. Look for:
- Triple-anchor hold-down (front, rear, top brace) for OEM-quality fitment
- Reinforced case ribs to resist plate-pack movement
- B0 or B13 base ledge matching the truck’s battery box specification
For aftermarket replacements, verify the customer’s existing hold-down geometry before specifying — mismatched hold-downs cause failure even with the right battery.
4. Reserve Capacity (RC) for sleeper cab loads
Long-haul trucks with sleeper cabs draw 30–50A overnight from accessories: parking AC, fridge, TV, phone charging, inverters. The battery bank must support this without dropping below the cranking voltage threshold. Look for:
- Reserve Capacity ≥ 200 minutes for primary cranking battery
- True deep-cycle dual-purpose batteries for the parking AC bank (separate from cranking)
- Voltage cutoff at 12.0V to protect the cranking battery from over-discharge
5. OEM validation history
For commercial vehicle markets, OEM-validation history matters more than spec sheet numbers. A battery that has been first-fit qualified by major commercial vehicle OEMs has been through:
- 1000+ hour vibration test cycles
- Field validation across multiple climate zones
- Warranty data feedback over multiple years
- Manufacturing process audits (IATF 16949 typical)
The Lingyun 6-QW Yongfei’er series has been first-fit validated by Shaanxi Auto Group, Beiben Heavy Truck, Foton Auman, Sany Heavy Industry, Liugong, and CIMC. That validation history is hard to replicate.
Common heavy-duty batteries by application
| Application | Recommended Capacity | AltusVolt Model |
|---|---|---|
| Light truck (3.5–7.5t) | 100–120Ah | 6-QW-120 |
| Medium truck (7.5–16t) | 135–150Ah | AV-HD-150 (6-QW-150) |
| Heavy truck (16t+) | 165–200Ah | 6-QW-180 / 6-QW-200 |
| Construction equipment | 150–200Ah | 6-QW-150 / N150 |
| Long-haul w/ sleeper cab | 200Ah dual-purpose | Obsidian S490 Pro (parking AC) |
Browse the Heavy-Duty Truck product line or request a fleet quote with your vehicle list.
Bottom line for buyers
Heavy-duty trucks earn money by running. A battery failure that strands a truck at a remote location costs the operator far more than the battery itself — typically $500–$2,000 in lost revenue, towing, and roadside service. Spec’ing the right battery isn’t a place to save 10% on landed cost.