
Bottom line: "Grade A" and "Grade B" are seller-defined labels, not universal certifications. For off-grid solar, verified capacity, internal resistance (IR), and batch consistency matter more than the sticker. Grade B can work for stationary, low-C-rate banks when you test incoming cells and accept higher variance risk. Validate bank sizing in the WattSizing Calculator.
Grade labels vs what you should verify
There is no universal retail standard for LiFePO4 grades—one vendor's Grade A may match another's Grade B.
| Label | Typical claim | Verify before buying |
|---|---|---|
| Grade A | Low IR, tight matching | Cell-level test data, batch ID |
| Grade B | Cosmetic defects, wider variance | Capacity and IR spread across set |
| Unspecified | Unknown provenance | Full incoming test |
Buyer-side verification beats headline grade claims every time.
Capacity testing: rated Ah vs what you actually get
Nameplate capacity (e.g., 280 Ah at 0.2C) assumes specific discharge conditions. Off-grid banks rarely operate at lab rates.
What to check before assembly:
- Resting voltage at delivery (LiFePO4 should sit near 3.30–3.35 V per cell when balanced and partially charged).
- Capacity test at your expected C-rate—many DIY builders use 0.2C–0.5C discharge to a BMS cutoff (~2.5 V/cell).
- Spread across the set: If one cell delivers 8–12% less than siblings, it becomes the weak link under load.
A bank performs to its weakest member. For step-by-step incoming checks, see How to Test LiFePO4 Cells Before Building a Battery Bank.
Internal resistance: the spec most listings hide
Internal resistance (IR) affects voltage sag under load, heat generation, and how evenly cells share current in parallel strings.
| IR trend | Effect on off-grid bank |
|---|---|
| Low, matched IR | Less sag, better efficiency, easier BMS balance |
| High or mismatched IR | Hot spots, early BMS cutoff, one cell hitting floor first |
Grade A lots often ship with tighter IR clustering (e.g., within 0.1–0.2 mΩ of batch mates). Grade B lots may show wider spread—acceptable for some projects, problematic for high-draw mobile or high-parallel-count builds.
Ask sellers for IR test sheets at a stated frequency (commonly 1 kHz). If they cannot provide them, treat the grade label as unverified marketing.
When Grade B cells are OK for stationary off-grid use
Grade B can work when all apply: stationary install (no RV/marine vibration), 0.1C–0.3C daily cycling, incoming tests on every cell, 1–2 spares budgeted, and downtime is tolerable (workshop, seasonal cabin).
Skip unverified Grade B for full-time primary off-grid homes or high-draw mobile banks.
Illustrative cost vs risk comparison
Example purchase options for 16 cells:
| Option | Price/cell | Test data | 16-cell total |
|---|---|---|---|
| A — documented Grade A | $95 | IR + capacity sheets | $1,520 |
| B — Grade B, limited data | $78 | Seller claim only | $1,248 |
Savings: $272 upfront—gone if two cells fail and shipping delays cost you power days.
What most guides skip
- Grade is not chemistry: A Grade B LiFePO4 is still LiFePO4; the issue is consistency and support, not a different battery type.
- Parallel strings amplify weak cells: One low-capacity cell in a 4P block limits the entire block's usable Ah.
- Cosmetic grade ≠electrical grade: Scratched wraps do not hurt performance; high IR and capacity outliers do.
- "Matched sets" need proof: Request serial ranges and test data from the same production batch, not cells pooled from multiple lots.
Checklist
- Request test documentation (capacity, IR, batch ID) before purchase.
- Verify return process in writing.
- Inspect cells on arrival; run voltage and IR checks before assembly.
- Spot-test capacity on 2–3 cells if full-set testing is impractical.
- Resolve outliers before welding—never balance around a bad cell.
FAQs
Are Grade B cells always bad?
No. Some Grade B cells perform adequately for stationary, low-C-rate off-grid banks when you incoming-test and replace outliers. Variance and support risk are typically higher than documented Grade A lots.
Can Grade A claims be faked?
Yes. That is why test sheets, seller reputation, and your own incoming checks matter more than the label on the listing photo.
Should I mix cells from different batches?
Avoid it when possible—especially for critical off-grid systems. Mixed batches increase IR and capacity spread, which makes BMS balancing harder under load.
How much capacity spread is too much between cells?
As a practical rule, flag any cell more than ~5% below batch mates on a comparable discharge test. Wider spread is more tolerable at low C-rates than in high-draw mobile setups.
Does internal resistance matter for a slow off-grid cabin bank?
Yes, but tolerance is wider. At 0.1C–0.3C, moderate IR mismatch is survivable; at 1C+ or in small parallel counts, IR mismatch causes early cutoff and heat.
Is Grade A worth the premium for a primary off-grid home?
For a full-time primary residence, documented Grade A (or equivalent verified cells) with clear warranty terms usually beats gambling on unverified Grade B—especially when replacement downtime has real cost.
Sources
- NREL - Battery Lifetime and Degradation Research
- U.S. Department of Energy - Energy Storage Fundamentals
CTA
After choosing your cells, validate total usable capacity and daily load coverage in the WattSizing Calculator before final assembly decisions.


