True. The battery on my 99 E250 lasted 11 years, driving about 4200 miles per year. The problem is that I can't drive my van, my VW, my four (now three) 65-66 Mustangs daily (or weekly) just to keep the battery charged. This thread is about repro Autolite batteries which do not last. The original complaint was about a dead battery in two months. The prognosis was a dead cell, with a second battery having the same problem. That is a manufacturing problem.
Again - the answer is to put pressure on the place you bought the battery, heavy pressure, and insist that they put pressure on the battery manufacturer.
Jim
Jim, You are exactly right and my vendor did step up and has a new battery on the way for me and all I have to do is return the old one to him vs. dealing with the manufacturer. That is his job to put pressure on them not me as I did not buy it from the manufacturer, I purchased it through him along with thousands of dollars worth of other parts over the years. He is no fool, so I am sure he is going to get his money back eventually or he will not be dealing with that company anymore.
P.S I just replaced the battery on my 2004 F250 with 50,000 miles on it and it never had a battery charger or float charger ever hooked up to it.
Bob, I use the term trickle charge for a 2 amp deep cycle charge for 24 hours vs. a 10 amp quick charge just to get the car to turn over. The float charger is probably a good investment but that is not what I was dealing with in this case and appears others have had the same issue.