Battery Chemistry and Floor Scrubber Performance
Lead-Acid: The $200 Battery That Costs $800 Over Three Years
Flooded lead-acid batteries power most entry-level floor scrubbers at an upfront cost of $150-250 per unit, but require weekly watering, monthly equalization charges, and dedicated ventilation due to hydrogen off-gassing during charging. A lead-acid battery in daily use degrades to 70% capacity within 18-24 months — meaning a floor scrubber rated for 3.5 hours of runtime drops to 2.5 hours by year two. In fact, the labor cost of watering alone adds $120-180/year at $22/hour for a maintenance tech spending 15 minutes per week per battery, making lead-acid battery maintenance one of the hidden cost drivers for any cleaning fleet.
AGM: Maintenance-Free but Heavier and Slower to Charge
Absorbent Glass Mat (AGM) batteries eliminate watering requirements and reduce off-gassing by sealing the electrolyte in fiberglass mats. However, this convenience comes at a cost: AGM batteries weigh 10-15% more than equivalent flooded lead-acid units and accept charge at only 0.2C — meaning a full recharge takes 5-6 hours versus 3-4 hours for a comparable lithium-ion pack. Single-shift operations can manage this limitation, but multi-shift facilities face a dilemma: the 5-hour recharge window forces either a second battery swap (adding $150-250 in spare battery cost) or a gap in cleaning coverage between shifts.
Lithium-Ion: 2,000+ Cycles and Opportunity Charging
Lithium iron phosphate (LiFePO4) batteries for floor scrubbers deliver 2,000-3,000 full charge cycles before reaching 80% capacity — 4-5x the cycle life of lead-acid at 400-600 cycles. The key operational advantage is opportunity charging: modern lithium batteries accept partial charges at any state of discharge without memory effect. Just 15 minutes during an operator break restores 25-30% of capacity, effectively eliminating battery swaps. Upfront cost runs 2-3x higher than lead-acid ($600-1,200 for a floor scrubber pack), but total cost of ownership over five years favors lithium-ion cleaning equipment by $400-800 when factoring replacement batteries, watering labor, and downtime.
Runtime and Operational Impact
Battery Size vs Floor Coverage Per Charge
| Battery Type | Typical Capacity | Runtime (est.) | Charge Time | Cycles to 80% |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Flooded Lead-Acid | 100-150 Ah @ 24V | 3-4 hours | 8-10 hours | 400-500 |
| AGM Sealed | 100-130 Ah @ 24V | 3-4 hours | 5-6 hours | 500-600 |
| LiFePO4 Lithium-Ion | 80-120 Ah @ 24V | 3.5-5 hours | 2-3 hours | 2,000-3,000 |
Opportunity Charging and Multi-Shift Operations
Lead-acid batteries require a full 8-10 hour charge cycle after partial discharge to prevent sulfation — a chemical process where lead sulfate crystals harden on the plates, permanently reducing capacity by 5-10% per incident of incomplete charging. This makes lead-acid incompatible with multi-shift operations unless a spare battery is purchased and swapped mid-shift. These batteries accept any charge level at any time — a 20-minute charge during a shift change restores 30-40% runtime in a battery-powered floor scrubber, enabling continuous operation across three shifts with a single battery. For facilities running two or more shifts, lithium-ion opportunity charging eliminates the cost of a second battery ($150-250 for lead-acid) and the 10-15 minute swap procedure. Learn about shift planning in our floor scrubber maintenance guide.
Total Cost of Ownership: 5-Year Comparison
Upfront vs Lifetime Cost Breakdown
Each floor scrubber battery represents 15-25% of the machine’s total cost, but drives 40-60% of lifetime operating expense through replacements, maintenance labor, and charging electricity. Beyond five years of daily single-shift use, a flooded lead-acid battery incurs approximately $850-1,100 in total cost: $200 initial purchase, two replacement batteries at $200 each ($400), watering labor at $130/year ($650), and electricity at $0.12/kWh. An equivalent lithium-ion battery costs $800-1,000 upfront with zero watering labor and no replacements — totaling $850-1,050 over five years, effectively the same lifetime cost but with zero maintenance touch time and the flexibility of opportunity charging.
Battery Replacement Downtime Cost
Each lead-acid battery replacement event costs more than the battery itself. Your maintenance tech spends 30-45 minutes removing the 50-70 lb battery, cleaning the battery compartment of acid residue, and installing the replacement — roughly $15-18 in labor per swap. Across two replacement cycles over five years, this adds $30-36. Proper lead-acid battery maintenance also includes disposal fees averaging $15-25 per battery at recycling centers, while lithium-ion batteries retain 60-70% residual value for secondary applications like solar storage. See our parts replacement guide for component-level cost tracking.
Electricity Cost and Charge Efficiency
Lead-acid chargers operate at 70-80% efficiency — 20-30% of input electricity converts to heat rather than stored energy. Modern lithium chargers achieve 92-96% efficiency. Consider a 100 Ah 24V battery (2.4 kWh): a full lead-acid charge consumes approximately 3.1-3.4 kWh versus 2.5-2.6 kWh for lithium-ion. Across 250 charge cycles per year, the 0.6-0.8 kWh per cycle difference adds up to 150-200 kWh annually — roughly $18-24 at industrial electricity rates of $0.12/kWh.
Making the Battery Decision
Decision Matrix by Operation Type
| Operation | Recommended Battery | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Single shift, budget-sensitive | Flooded Lead-Acid | $200 upfront, manageable with daily watering routine |
| Single shift, low-maintenance | AGM Sealed | No watering, 500-600 cycle life, $250-350 upfront |
| Multi-shift (2+) | LiFePO4 Lithium-Ion | Opportunity charging eliminates second battery cost |
| Healthcare/cleanroom | LiFePO4 Lithium-Ion | Zero off-gassing, no ventilation requirements |
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does a floor scrubber battery last on a single charge?
3-4 hours for lead-acid and AGM; 3.5-5 hours for lithium-ion depending on capacity (80-120 Ah at 24V). Actual runtime varies with brush pressure, vacuum draw, and floor surface resistance — bare concrete consumes 15-20% more power per m² than polished concrete due to higher friction.
Can I replace a lead-acid battery with lithium-ion in an existing floor scrubber?
Yes, if the charger is replaced with a lithium-ion-compatible unit. Lithium-ion cleaning equipment requires a constant-current/constant-voltage (CC/CV) charge profile; using a lead-acid charger on lithium-ion will undercharge the battery by 10-15% and reduce cycle life. Budget $150-300 for a compatible lithium-ion charger in addition to the battery cost.
How often should floor scrubber batteries be replaced?
Lead-acid: every 18-24 months in daily use (400-500 cycles to 70% capacity). AGM: every 24-30 months (500-600 cycles). Lithium-ion: every 5-7 years (2,000-3,000 cycles to 80% capacity). Replace when runtime drops below 60% of the original specification. A battery-powered floor scrubber with lithium-ion cells can significantly extend replacement intervals.
Do lithium-ion floor scrubber batteries require special ventilation?
No. LiFePO4 chemistry produces zero hydrogen off-gassing during charge or discharge, unlike lead-acid which vents hydrogen gas at 0.03-0.05 L per Ah during the final charging phase. This makes lithium-ion cleaning equipment suitable for sealed environments where hydrogen accumulation would require explosion-proof ventilation rated at $2,000-5,000 installation cost.
Need help choosing the right battery configuration for your floor scrubber fleet? Contact TMC TECH for a free consultation covering battery chemistry, runtime requirements, and total cost of ownership for your specific operation.