Brewsky, You are correct in that the recommended Max charge rate is 1/10 of the batteries amp rating. Greenjeans states his battery is a Champion 50N18LA2 which is an 18 amp hour battery. 2 amps is already over the max recommended charge rate. Also considering the poor regulation qualities of the vast majority of consumer battery chargers and you could easily be in an over charge situation. The Sears consumer grade battery chargers (assuming that is what Greenjeans has) are not float chargers, they could easily over charge a small amp battery. IMHO, it is always better to be safe, and the battery tender is both a low amp (depending on brand 1.2 to 1.5 amp) and a float charger. Actually, just checked and the battery tender jr. is only .75 amps which is still plenty, but also very battery friendly. What does charging a motorcycle battery to rapidly do?
From Motorcycle Consumer News: Battery Charging--Easy Does It
A motorcycle battery should never receive the kind of high-rate booster charge intended for a car battery, and unfortunately that always seems to be the only type of charger a service station has on hand when your bike needs help.
Inexpensive trickle charger with pigtail connector allows easy battery charging. Do not leave these charging longer than overnight without monitoring the battery.
To learn the proper maximum charging rate for your battery, look at the alphanumeric code printed across the case of the battery and you will usually find its Amp/Hour rating. If it's not obvious, check your owners manual. The proper trickle-charging rate for a motorcycle battery is one-tenth of the A/H rating for as long as 10 hours, depending on how discharged it is. Charging faster than 2.0/2.5 amps causes overheating which can warp and even melt the battery case if ignored. High-rate charging also speeds up internal corrosion, and its visible sign is sediment buildup under the cells, which if it reaches high enough, will also permanently short out the battery. Too high a charging rate can also result in a battery that does not hold a charge because too-rapid transformation of the lead sulfate may actually trap sulfate under a surface coating of rejuvenated lead, producing a battery that can test okay but fails quickly.
I might add that after 50 years on motorcycles, and several dozens of batteries later, I concur fully with the above assessment.