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Best household battery tester

Poe34

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Nov 26, 2016
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530
Location
Ohio
Can anyone recommend a decent household battery tester? After reading reviews on Amazon, it looks like most testers do not test the battery with a load and reads all batteries as "good."
 
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torqueman2002

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Jun 3, 2009
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6,145
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SE Michigan
I have an older model similar to this --> Midtronics PBT200 Battery Tester with Charging System Test. It tests the capacitance of a battery, and ability to accept and hold a charge.


It is best used in conjunction with a load tester, like Clore Automotive Solar 1874 500 Amp Carbon Pile Battery Load Tester.


Wait, did you mean household batteries? Like AA, AAA, C, D, 9V?
 

Eric29

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Apr 18, 2008
Messages
499
Location
Western NY
Interesting. I was talking about the one from ZTS though because I thought the question was about batteries found around the house. ZTS has some less expensive testers that do not test as wide a variety of batteries but they do test them under load. I do not think that the inexpensive testers test under load. I think the inexpensive testers are voltage testers. I don’t think that for $7 you’re going to get the circuitry to test a battery under load.


Strangely there are 2 different MBT-1 testers...one for dry cells and one for 12v auto style wet-cells....

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B000FQG1XE/?tag=atomicindus08-20

https://www.specialized.net/pulsete...YJFPCCIA_UH5ZkXaHcPliotC7a6ho7_EaAsYhEALw_wcB
 

MaximRecoil

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Joined
Feb 28, 2011
Messages
161
Location
Maine, USA
I've yet to see a battery tester of any kind that was any good. The best test is to just use the battery and see how well it works.

A couple years ago I had a cheap Walmart "ValuePower" battery tested at my local Advance Auto. They had a fancy computerized tester which printed out the results on paper, which I assume was all kinds of expensive, and it reported that my battery had a dead cell. I took out my multimeter and showed the kid that the voltage was 12.6, and asked him to explain how it's possible for a battery with a dead cell to have a voltage higher than ~10.5 (a 12v car battery has 6 cells in series, ~2.1 volts each). He had no answer. I'm still using the battery today and it's fine.

I've used professional battery testers like the old Snap-on YA201 and had batteries that tested good (including on the load test) yet they could barely crank an engine.
 
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Davefr

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Jan 7, 2010
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Location
OR
Sometimes there's beauty in simplicity. This is the best one I've ever used for 1.5 V batteries.

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You could also try WC Fields's nose but an LED doesn't put enough load on a battery compared to an fillament bulb.

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My tongue does a decent job on 9 V batteries. (no image)
 

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richfinn

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Jan 29, 2011
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Location
Leeds, Yorkshire, England
Vehicle batteries I like to use the amp clamp method to see if they will absorb current when discharged (this is partially what a midtronics unit does if it comes with a clamp)

Small batteries out of keyfobs and watches etc. I like to use a regular multimeter set to D.C. volts and then apply a load with my loadpro test leads
 

mfewtrail

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Apr 14, 2011
Messages
675
The old "free" HF meters which I don't believe are free anymore have a battery test function that puts a small load on them.
 

TuxThePenguin

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Jul 8, 2020
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Location
MA
I don’t think that for $7 you’re going to get the circuitry to test a battery under load.

I literally linked the datasheet shows that it is testing under load.

If you don't want the $7 tester, that's totally fine.

But it does test under load.

Do you want to test under a higher load than 4 ohms (which at 1.5v means 375mA and about half a watt or so)? I can see how you might want to do that with C and D cells. I think 375mA should be reasonable for testing AA and AAA at least.

The ZTS might fill a gap between the cheap testers and the expensive battery capacity testing stuff (or electronic load) though.
 
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SeisMec

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Joined
Aug 24, 2018
Messages
406
Location
Beryl, Utah
If you're asking about an automotive/motorcycle/riding mower/... battery tester, I am very happy with my ANCEL BA101 (for 12v lead acid batteries rated 100 - 2000 CCA). I've had it about a year and a half now. ANCEL also makes a $10 cheaper BST200 (for 12v lead acid batteries rated 100 - 1100 CCA).
 

BlakeTheCarGuy

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Oct 10, 2018
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9,385
Location
Roanoke Virginia
I don’t know of any modern ones I use my dads Diehard from Sears it is a tester and charger he bought it new in 1983 never had any issues with it


Sent from my iPhone using Garage Journal
 

Eric29

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Joined
Apr 18, 2008
Messages
499
Location
Western NY
I own that tester. It doesn’t give accurate readings on batteries and I don’t believe the data sheet.

Or perhaps it’s more accurate to say that I don’t care what the data sheet says. The tester doesn’t work.



I literally linked the datasheet shows that it is testing under load.

If you don't want the $7 tester, that's totally fine.

But it does test under load.

Do you want to test under a higher load than 4 ohms (which at 1.5v means 375mA and about half a watt or so)? I can see how you might want to do that with C and D cells. I think 375mA should be reasonable for testing AA and AAA at least.

The ZTS might fill a gap between the cheap testers and the expensive battery capacity testing stuff (or electronic load) though.
 

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