I have two Cyberpower 1400va (900 watt) pure sine wave UPS systems. They are over 5 years old and the lead acid batteries inside them are shot. The units use two 12v 8AH SLA batteries in series and for what they cost to replace I could almost replace the entire UPS units. I live in Hawaii so the shipping cost of lead acid batteries is often higher than the cost of the batteries themselves and Amazon won't ship them here for free prime or otherwise.
My idea is to buy two 12v SLA batteries off eBay from a manufacturer I have been buying the same batteries from for 15 years. They've solved the shipping cost dilemma by designing the batteries to fit into flat-rate boxes. They are 18AH each so obviously won't fit inside the UPS units, but that is not a problem for my application.
These UPS units aren't used in a traditional manner of being backup power. I have a DIY solar setup that uses a transfer switch to switch loads back and forth from solar and grid power based on the voltage of the solar battery bank. The UPS systems are between the inverter and the loads to take the abuse of the power transfers. The UPS batteries don't usually get cycled because it's a rare occurrence the grid goes out at the same time the solar battery bank is depleted, which is probably why I got 5 years out of the original batteries. The UPS units use an Automatic Voltage Regulation (AVR) in line interactive UPS system which stabilizes the incoming AC signal to maintain output power at a nominal 120 volts by controlling high and low voltages without resorting to battery power, but when the batteries are shot the UPS units go into a protected mode and power off if the AVR is overwhelmed.
My question is, do I even need to buy four batteries, or could I use two batteries and connect them to both UPS units? I understand the batteries will be receiving the charging current from both UPS units, but Cyberpower lists the recharge time at 8 hours, so the charging current doesn't seem like it would be too high for these batteries. The other issue is that if both UPS units start drawing from the batteries at the same time, the current draw could theoretically be higher than what the batteries can deliver for any length of time, but that is easily remedied by limiting the loads of both UPS systems to a max of 900 watts (combined) which each UPS is individually rated for.
Thoughts?