just a ruff estimate, how many charge hours can you get out of that deep cell battery? on a single charge of the deep cell.[/QUOTE
Well, I don't really know the answer to that question...I do know the deep cell battery has an amp-hour rating (capacity), and one should be able to use that to compute how many batteries of a certain mah rating could be charged...but this is not my strong suit, so I'll hope someone smarter and more experienced with this stuff will provide a better answer.
I do know that my deep cycle battery is rated at 70-80 amp hours.
I found this info about capacity doing a google search:
[h=3]Amp-Hour Capacity[/h]All deep cycle batteries are rated in amp-hours. An amp-hour is one amp for one hour, or 10 amps for 1/10 of an hour and so forth. It is amps x hours. If you have something that pulls 20 amps, and you use it for 20 minutes, then the amp-hours used would be 20 (amps) x .333 (hours), or 6.67 AH. The generally accepted AH rating time period for batteries used in solar electric and backup power systems (and for nearly all deep cycle batteries) is the "20 hour rate". (Some, such as the Concorde AGM, use the 24 hour rate, which is probably a better real-world rating). This means that it is discharged down to 10.5 volts over a 20 hour period while the total actual amp-hours it supplies is measured.
Good question, I'd like to know also. I think I'll be doing the same thing.