with the development of LED, nowadays, solar street lights become more compact, they can integrate light source, panel and battery into one unite,
and this facilitates the solar lighting industry. in my experience, the weakest parts of solar lights are its controller and batteries,
more failure caused by the solar charge controller.
here is a definitive introduction guide of the solar charge controller, hope this can be helpful
https://enkonn-solar.com/solar-charge-controller/
That is, what you need for lead acid batteries. It makes the system more complex, so it makes sense for higher power units (like the streetlights,...).
For small garden lights using proper overcharge tolerant cells is the easiest way to go (hypothetically that would work for the larger streetlight as well, but the battery cost and waste heat management would make it way too expensive and even complex, so it is better to use the controller there).
There are few technical mistakes in the text (however the recommendation on how to use the system seems to be correct):
- The discharge does not form sulfate crystals, but the PbS is in an amorphous form. It is when the amorphous material crystallize, the battery capacity get lost (amorphous PbS get dissolved by charging, but the crystals do not anymore)
- The "equalizing" (as described) is not that much about equalizing one cell towards others (like in e.g. LiIon cells; that happens during the float charge), but "equalizing" the content across the cell internal volume, the hydrogen bubbles are intentionally generated (for some short time, after some period of time, like 30 minutes every month or so) to stir the cell content. In cars the same is done by the car movement, therefore the battery should be placed with cell plates longitudinally, so car acceleration and deceleration is able to stir the electrolyte. Well, many car makers do follow that, but many place the battery where was the last place in the engine bay, often sacrificing the possible battery life (it survives the car warranty either way, so many don't care).
This stirring is possible and needed only with flooded cells, where the electrolyte mix may get separated by gravity and where the bubbles are able to mix it back. With gel or similar electrolyte forms this should not be done (by the overcharging), as it always means some water loss, but because the electrolyte is rather immobilized by the gel, it is not needed either.