Depending on what you have, you'll probably never get much into the yellow and never into the red zones indicated in the post above with LiFePO4. I went for a long trip with my truck camper, and then to Brazil fishing for a month. I had hooked up a 12/24VDC converter to power my Starlink mini through its long cable. It was kludged directly to the Renogy battery, not through the regular fused system, during the trip when I found that you can't use 12VDC directly with the long cable because of voltage drop. I didn't remember to unhook it when I left for Brazil, and I guess it was still drawing slightly when I tripped the breaker and "isolated" the batteries before this trip. Since it didn't draw through my monitoring system, the usage read "0" amps. I came home to apparently dead LiFePO4 batteries, but one click of the startup switch for the Battery Management System (BMS) on the Renogy cells showed I still had 12.8 volts. Looking at specs for the Renogy BMS, it ways it will cutoff when one of the 4 cells drops below 2.3 volts, protecting the cells. If this would have been a system with my old Pb-acid batteries, they would likely have completely discharged, and continued to discharge with any recovery over this long time, probably damaging them. I really like the current systems, and I am really impressed with Renogy products, which I have been using for >5 years now. To be honest, I have 12 LiFePO4 batteries of various brands now, ranging from 100-460 AmpHours, all 12VDC, and all of them are still working well, though I guess some have lost capacity over time. A neighbor replaced his huge (like 2000Ah) flooded Pb-acid system a few years ago with LiFePO4 and has already exceeded his earlier replacement schedule. He did burn up two alternators before he put a DC/DC in between, so you need to be careful. If you are considering replacing house batteries, you probably won't regret switching to LiFePO4.