This is the easy way.
Reserve capacity is a measurement of how long a battery can sustain a 25A load. In minutes. So it is an easy direct measure of performance under load.
An MK GEL 74Ah reserve capacity is exactly 135 minutes. Its in its spec sheet. The clock stops when the battery voltage falls to 10.5V (21V in a chair).
when discharging at exactly 25A. Unfortunately for us a chair stops and gives a red flashing at some point around 22.5 to 23V. So we dont get to use it all!
So in reality you dont get that full 135 minutes. Maybe 90 to 100 mins at 25A. It doesent matter a lot it still allows DIRECT battery to battery comparison under load.
So other batteries with worse internal resistance fall to this point faster. You dont go for as long... It isnt about Ah like a fuel tank with lead, but about how many Ah are ACCESSIBLE at any given load. That 25A figure equates to a heavy rehab 6.2 or 8 mph chair rolling at full speed quite well. We get around 14 to 15 miles before the battery dies, in general which is 2 hours (120 mins) at full speed on most heavy chairs.
So when looking for a decent chair battery its an easy way to compare performance when you cant find or understand internal resistance values or the Ah degradation due to load etc. Now this tells us nothing about its cycle life. A starter battery usually has great reserve capacity and is cheap. But wont last a month.
Just choose the battery with GOOD cycle life TOO!
(say 450 to 500 at 80% discharge levels) and the best RESERVE capacity rating like 135 minutes, or 120 mins etc in order to find the one with the best performance/range and lifespan.
Then look at the price.