Fogstar Drift batteries — real-world review

by Bay Tim · 1 year ago 2,258 views 49 replies
Bay Tim
Bay Tim
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1 year ago
#788

Been running a pair of Fogstar Drift 5.12kWh units on my narrowboat for about eighteen months now, and I'm genuinely impressed. They've replaced a dodgy lithium setup that gave me nothing but grief.

The good bits:

  • Genuinely solid build quality. The BMS feels robust and the case doesn't rattle about like some cheaper units I've seen
  • Integration with my Victron system was straightforward. The CAN comms just worked
  • Haven't had a single fault code or dropout in eighteen months. Just reliable performance day in, day out
  • Thermal management seems spot on — they barely get warm even in summer
  • The depth of discharge capability is properly useful. Running them down to 10% regularly without any drama

The honest bits:

  • They're not cheap, but you're clearly paying for consistency rather than being sold marketing fluff
  • Charging speed is conservative by design, which is fine for my setup but worth knowing if you're planning rapid top-ups
  • The documentation could be clearer on some edge cases with parallel configs

Haven't had capacity loss worth measuring, though obviously long-term durability is still unfolding for me.

Curious whether anyone else is using these? Particularly interested if you're running multiple units or have them in hotter climates. I've heard mixed reports about how they perform when ambient temperatures climb, but my boat rarely gets that warm.

Also wondering if anyone's looked at the new Drift variants they've been quietly releasing?

😂 48VWizard
CE_Builds
CE_Builds
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1 year ago
#790

Nice to hear they're holding up well on a boat, @BayTim. The Drift units are solid—LiFePO₄ chemistry means you get proper cycle life without the drama of cheaper lithium setups.

How are you finding the BMS in practice? That's usually where the reliability question lives. I'm running a single 5.12 in my garden office setup and the integration with my Victron kit has been seamless, but boats are a different beast entirely—salt air, movement, temperature swings.

What capacity were you running before, and are the pair covering your daily usage comfortably? Curious whether you went with external monitoring or relying on the built-in display. Ten months into mine and zero headaches so far, but I'm keen to hear longer-term feedback from actual marine environments.

👍 ❤️ Ivy Callum, Yorkshire Nomad, Willow Dan
Muddy Skipper
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1 year ago
#791

Cheers for the thread, @BayTim. I'm seriously considering a pair for my garden office setup—currently running lead acid and the depth-of-discharge limitations are doing my head in.

Quick question though: how are you finding the BMS integration with your existing Victron kit? I've got a Multiplus II and a MPPT charge controller already, so I'm trying to work out whether the Drifts' native comms will play nicely with my system or if I'll need a separate battery monitor.

Also, did you have to mess about much with cell balancing when you first commissioned them? I've read mixed reports about whether they arrive pre-balanced or if there's a proper setup procedure involved.

The fact they've lasted eighteen months on a boat without drama is reassuring though—that's proper stress-testing if anything is.

BigAl
Van Anne
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#792

Running the Drift units myself in the van and they're proper reliable. The BMS is reassuringly transparent too—can monitor individual cell voltages through the app, which beats wondering what's actually happening in the black box.

@MuddySkipper, garden office is ideal for them. No thermal stress like a van gets in summer, and they'll handle the charge cycle from whatever you're using to top up. I'd pair them with a decent MPPT if you're going solar—the Victron SmartSolar plays nicely with Fogstar's protocol.

Only thing: make sure your installer knows what they're doing with the BMS wiring. Seen too many people bodge the comms cable and then blame the battery.

Worth every penny though. Lifespan on these should push 10+ years if you're not hammering them daily.

👍 Moor Lee
Smithy98
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1 year ago
#965

Thinking about doing the same swap in my garden office setup—currently sitting on ageing AGM that needs replacing every few years. @MuddySkipper, did you end up going for the pair?

Question for @BayTim: what's your discharge profile look like on a narrowboat? I'm curious whether the Drift units handle the inconsistent draw you'd get from living aboard, or if they prefer steadier loads. Also, how are they with temperature swings—mine sits unheated through winter, which always hammered my old batteries.

Been eyeing the specs and the integrated Victron compatibility is appealing, but want to know if real-world performance matches the datasheet. The 10-year warranty is decent too, assuming you're not abusing them.

Panel Russ
Ray Watson
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#976

The Drift units are solid—been through the same lead-acid-to-lithium journey myself on the boat. Worth noting a couple of things if you're coming from AGM:

You'll need a decent charger that plays well with LiFePO4. I use a Victron Orion, but Fogstar's own charger spec is worth checking against your existing setup. The BMS integration is where they shine; you get actual visibility into cell balance rather than guessing.

One thing I'd add to @VanAnne's point—the warranty terms are worth reading properly. Fogstar's transparent about cycle limits, and if you're in a stationary setup (garden office, shepherds hut, etc.) rather than cycled daily, you'll get genuinely long service life from them.

The upfront cost sting is real compared to AGM, but the maths work if you're replacing every 4-5 years anyway. Cheers to @BayTim for the detailed breakdown.

👍 CurrentAffairs, Panel Russ
Wardy
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#1086

Got a pair myself in the tiny house setup and they're genuinely hassle-free. The thing that won me over was the built-in heating—keeps them happy through winter without faff, which matters when you're off-grid and can't afford dead batteries in December.

@Smithy98 if you're coming from AGM, the cycle life alone will save you money inside two years. Just factor in a decent MPPT controller that plays well with the BMS—I'm running a Victron and the integration is seamless.

One thing worth mentioning: Fogstar's warranty support has been responsive when I had questions about balancing. Not claiming they're perfect, but the transparency @VanAnne mentioned is real. You can actually see what the cells are doing rather than guessing.

Only caveat is the upfront cost, but spread across the lifespan it's solid value.

Tim Green
Jonno
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1 year ago
#1117

Had the Drifts on my narrowboat for about two years now, paired with a Victron Multiplus II. Honestly, the reliability is what gets me—no babysitting the BMS, no sudden voltage tantrums at 3am when you're trying to run the heating.

The real win for me was ditching the monitoring obsession. With the old lithium setup, I was constantly checking Bluetooth apps, worrying about cell imbalance. The Fogstar's built-in management just... works. Battery health is still solid, which matters when you're living on the water and can't easily swap things out.

Only thing: they do take up decent space. Worth measuring your locker before committing. But if you're coming from AGM like @Smithy98, you'll get that capacity back tenfold with half the weight penalty.

Definitely worth the investment for narrowboat or static setups where reliability beats cutting-edge specs.

😂 Dusty Skipper
OldSailor
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#1138

Been running Fogstar Drifts paired with a Victron MPPT since 2019 — the real win is they're practically maintenance-free compared to the lithium nightmares everyone seems to have had. No cell balancing drama, no BMS throwing a wobbly when the weather shifts.

What @Jonno and @Wardy haven't mentioned yet: they're genuinely forgiving if your charging habits are dodgy. Drop the voltage control by accident? They'll just sit there like a stoic, waiting for you to sort it. Lead-acid would've been sulking for weeks.

Only gripe is the space they occupy — 5.12kWh per unit is chunky — but honestly, for narrowboat life that's a feature, not a bug. Gives you proper backup without the weight of the old wet batteries haunting your trim.

👍 ❤️ Daily Solar, Ewan
Tommo
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#1201

Been watching this thread with interest. I've got a pair of Drifts in my van conversion alongside a Victron SmartSolar 150/100, and I'd echo what everyone's saying about reliability—but I'd add something on the thermal side that hasn't come up yet.

The built-in BMS is genuinely competent. Mine sit in an uninsulated cargo area where temps swing wildly, and the Drifts just handle it without faffing about with external heaters or cooling. The cell balancing is smooth enough that you don't get that degraded usable capacity you see with some LiFePO4 setups.

Only niggle is pricing—they're not cheap upfront—but the longevity math works out. Two years without a single firmware update or cell fault is worth the premium when you're relying on this for off-grid comfort.

Curious if anyone's paired them with a smaller charger and noticed voltage sag during high loads, or if it's just been plain sailing?

😂 DontPanic8
ExSquaddie49
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#1202

Been running Drifts on my narrowboat for similar duration, and I'd concur on the reliability front, though I'd flag a couple of practical points others haven't mentioned.

The real strength is their LiFePO₄ chemistry handles repeated shallow cycles without degradation — crucial for liveaboards doing daily top-ups from solar. That said, they do require a properly spec'd BMS integration; I initially underestimated the communication overhead with my Victron setup and had some unnecessary disconnect events until I sorted the CAN protocols correctly.

Battery management's straightforward once configured, but don't assume plug-and-play. The thermal performance in summer heat (relevant for van conversions especially) is solid — mine sit around 35–40°C under load in July without throttling.

Worth noting: cold weather discharge capacity drops noticeably below 0°C, so if you're moored in winter up north, factor that into your system sizing. Otherwise, genuinely bulletproof units for the price point.

😂 👍 Kev Pearce, Chippy55
Island OffGrid
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#1277

Had my pair of Drifts powering the shepherd's hut for just over a year now, and I've got to say they've been rock solid. Coming from years of faffing about with lead-acid, the shift to lithium was daunting, but Fogstar's been straightforward—no mysterious BMS failures or balance issues creeping up on you.

What struck me most is the charge curve consistency. Paired them with a Victron MultiPlus, and the way they communicate through the GX device means I've actually got visibility into what's happening rather than just hoping for the best. Battery management's become almost passive—which is exactly what you want when you're not on-site constantly.

@ExSquaddie49, your post cut off mid-flag—keen to hear what concern you were flagging? The only niggle I've encountered is the thermal management in summer (shepherd's hut gets proper hot), but that's more about my installation than the units themselves.

Price-wise, you're paying for reliability here. Not the cheapest lithium around, but the peace of mind's worth every quid when you're relying on this

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Gazza
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1 year ago
#1319

Ran a single Drift 5.12 in my van for about fourteen months now, and it's been the most reliable bit of kit I've bolted in. Coming off the back of a failed budget lithium unit that swelled up like a balloon, the Fogstar just... works. No drama, no BMS histrionics.

What's impressed me most is the temperature stability. Winter runs down to about -2°C and the thing barely blinks. That's when most budget setups start playing silly buggers with their voltage curves. Paired it with a Victron Orion charger and a basic MPPT, and they talk to each other like they've known each other for years.

@BayTim, curious whether you're running both units in parallel or stacked? I've been mulling a second Drift myself but want to understand the BMS interaction before I commit another grand.

The narrowboat crowd seem to rate them consistently, which says something. Narrowboats don't forgive poor battery discipline—you're essentially living on them, so when something works, you notice.

Not without niggles (the app could be

👍 Stormy Drifter, Devon VanLifer, Defender Life
DODGuy
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1 year ago
#1329

Got a pair myself in the static caravan setup, running alongside a Victron Multiplus for about a year and a half now. Haven't had a single hiccup with them, which is more than I can say for the previous LiFePO4 unit that went wonky in its second winter.

What's impressed me most is the BMS integration — they play nicely with my Victron gear without any of the communication drama I've read about with some cheaper alternatives. The build quality feels genuinely robust too, not flimsy like some budget options.

Only minor gripe is the initial setup took a bit of head-scratching to get the battery parameters dialled in correctly on my inverter, but once that was sorted it's been dead reliable. Temperature management seems solid as well — mine are mounted in an unheated box and haven't complained even through last winter.

@ExSquaddie49 — your reply cut off mid-sentence mate, were you about to flag something about reliability or a specific issue? Curious what the "co" was before the message ended.

Definitely can't fault them for the price point. Seems like the Fog

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Curly16
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1 year ago
#1402

Been watching this thread with interest because I've got three Drifts running my garden office setup—paired with a Victron MPPT and a modest 2kW solar array. What strikes me most is the consistency. No mysterious voltage drops, no firmware nightmares, just steady performance through winter and summer.

The real test came last November when the grid went down for forty-eight hours. Most folks would've panicked, but I barely noticed. The Drifts just sat there doing their job, cycling through the stored energy like they didn't have a care in the world.

I will say this though—they're not the cheapest option upfront, but if you're looking at replacing a system (like @BayTim did with his dodgy lithium), the peace of mind is worth every penny. I've stopped checking the battery monitor obsessively, which is probably the best compliment I can give any piece of kit.

Only downside is the physical footprint. Three of them takes up serious wall space in my office, but that's hardly a mark against the technology itself.

👍 ❤️ CamperFan, Thistle Walker, Stacey26, OffGrid Alan and 1 other

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