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Re: How does your team charge & test batteries?
Al, The unit draws only 125 amps, not 200. The CCA setting on the tester doesn't change the load on the battery, it just affects the computation that the tester displays. I would use this tester in combination with an inexpensive digital voltmeter to get a reading with more resolution. Asking an FRC battery to supply 125 amps for 5 seconds is no different from what these batteries often see in competition. |
Re: How does your team charge & test batteries?
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That is good to know that this tester may not harm the batteries, as I certainly wouldn't want to put any additional drain on the battery in the process... I'm not sure but I am under the impression that when this tester is plugged into a 12 v battery that it is measuring the voltage under a load (unlike a DMM/ Voltmeter might do) and the CCA start test is an additional load test that is selected by adjusting the CCA voltage on the tester before performing the CCA start test. Is this correct or is the tester only reading the voltage without a load (like a DMM/ Voltmeter might do) when the CCA start test button is not pressed? I wanted to do more than just measure the voltage as I experienced the same situation once where we had a battery that measured 13 V and it died too soon during a competition... Once is enough for me thanks... Thanks for the suggestions and feedback! |
Re: How does your team charge & test batteries?
OK, I just found out that the battery is not under load until you press
the start test button which applies a load based upon the CCA (cold cranking amps) that is selected to match what the battery is rated at but what would be a safe value of this to test the batteries against? |
Re: How does your team charge & test batteries?
Aside from a charging station/battery beak, we cut up red and green pool noodles in 1 inch slices (the kind with the hollow center). When a battery comes off the robot after a match, we pop a red noodle around the wire. When the battery is fully charged (and checked with the beak), we put a green noodle on it. This way, we always have a stock of recognizable and fresh batteries for the quick turnaround matches on Saturday afternoons.
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Re: How does your team charge & test batteries?
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I recommend that you ignore the LED readout, and use the actual voltage under load, and compare it to the value for a known good battery, and keep a time history of each battery's results to see trends. |
Re: How does your team charge & test batteries?
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For that, I strongly recommend what Al has suggested a number of times. A West Mountain Radio battery tester. Even this year, we found several batteries that would test fine on the battery beak, run fine at a 1 or 2 amp draw, then suddenly dump down so that their final amp hour rating was 13 or 12 Ah, rather than around 18. |
Re: How does your team charge & test batteries?
The Wel-built load tester like most inexpensive load testers intended for testing automotive starting batteries just load the battery at 125 or 100 amps so you can measure the voltage and infer the CCA based on the voltage under that load.
They do not put excessive strain on the batteries if occasionally used per their instructions and they are a good way to see how the battery will perform when asked to supply the kids of loads that one might see in a match. The Battery Beak is good for seeing the internal resistance of the battery, which does give you some insight as too its health, and it's SOC. A volt meter will only give you and indication of the SOC but no info on the health of the battery. |
Re: How does your team charge & test batteries?
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Re: How does your team charge & test batteries?
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Re: How does your team charge & test batteries?
Never drain these batteries all the way down. This is a technique that was used on old chemistry NiCad batteries, never for lead acid.
Ether, the instruction sheet is very misleading by specifying 200-1000 amps and then specifying 125 amps. A team once showed me a tester they were using to make tests and when they connected it to the battery a resistor glowed inside. Since that day, I have been leary of any automotive type tester. |
Re: How does your team charge & test batteries?
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As mentioned above all of this style (inexpensive) load tester I've ever seen applies a fixed load of 100 or 125 amps and is only intended to do so for 5 or 10 seconds. Now there are testers out there that are adjustable and can put a higher load on the battery but I've never seen one that didn't cost hundreds, if not thousands, of dollars. Really there is no reason to be leery of this style of tester. For it to be able to drain a healthy, fully charged, FRC legal battery down to a 0 SOC you better have some serious gloves on because it will become too hot to touch, or you'd have to run the test over and over and over again w/o charging the battery. The key is using it as intended with no more than a 5 or 10 sec load on the battery. |
Re: How does your team charge & test batteries?
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Re: How does your team charge & test batteries?
We use a Dual PRO RS3 and it works great. We used to use a raw car battery charge with 9 batteries in parallel but it only charged the battery to 12.6 volts and slowly.
We put a boat battery on are cart with a Turnigy accucell 6 wired up for internal charging, Last minute queue charging and secret overnight charging. What's nice about it is that it has a display to show the voltage and it runs of a 12v supply (it will charge above 12v). It's also dirt cheap |
Re: How does your team charge & test batteries?
One of our mentors built us a battery tester back around 2009 that puts a 30 amp load on the battery with voltage feedback, leave it on for about ~15 seconds and hope your around 11.5V...
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Re: How does your team charge & test batteries?
My team has a battery cart with a 3-way charger like this one. We use a Battery Beak for testing. I highly suggest the Battery Beak. Hope this helps.
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