for cabin/off-grid/RV/ATV/battery back ups.
two newish batteries are now available in the USofA and for that matter, most of the world. that are worth mentioning
- the small cylindrical 18650 types have been around awhile - often used in electric cars. the new types are bigger, better and can discharge at 2+C without damage. As an example battle born uses a bank of small cylindrical batteries - just like your battery power tools.
- they don't last as long as iron/water batteries but you won't get a hernia trying to lift one.
- one will do about 20,000 charge cycles
- one is prismatic and very easy to use and balance.
the specs on these will beat the battle born brand -
so new users or those not electrically inclined - battle born is really good. they are nearly lead acid drop in replacements - and good quality control/QA. - popular with RV and boon-docking users. i've used these at work.
https://battlebornbatteries.com/product-category/lifepo4-batteries/if life cycle is your primary concern - look at Lithium Titanate batteries. Yinlong company claims 20k cycles.
-i've never used these but they have been used by people i know - powering remote RF sites. good reviews all round - and no premature failures over the last year. They are replacing the currently deployed fuel-cell setups with solar.
I like the Fortune brand prismatic 100ah batteries. (my current favorites) easy to use and put together as a kit. balance the strings, add a BMS and you are done. i use a 24V w/ a 3k sine inverter on a cart now instead of a generator for local power - runs a small stick welder or my circular saw all day long. if your curious i have a 8s2p setup.
https://www.electriccarpartscompany.com/fortune-100ah-aluminum-encased-battery- a couple of notes on current lithium batteries - they don't like getting hot, sitting in a car in the sun hot. they don't work below -10F without a heater. They don't tend to explode anymore. their life cycle and power density are now exceeding lead acid batteries of all types. there are lots of good videos and books written at the HS grad level using typical hand tools. the small cylinder batteries are best spot welded as an example - these newer batteries use a metric wrench. IMHO worth considering. And lastly - battle born batteries are balanced with a BMS built in, no fiddling or building needed.