I have read through old forum posts on car battery testers and I've learned a lot, but I'm still confused.
Here's what I've gleaned: there are many different kinds of testers (carbon pile, DC load, AC conductance, EIS). Each has different advantages/disadvantages (which I won't recount here), and forum members have a lot of strong opinions on which one is "best". There are many different brands recommended over the years (Midtronics, Solar/CA Clore, Ancel, Schumacher, to name a few). Some of them have basic grey/black LCD displays, some have backlit displays, and some have fancy color LCD pixel grids like a mobile phone. And some people get upset that anyone buys a tester at all, instead advocating for cranking the car while using a multimeter (presumably the multimeter is built from scrap parts to save extra money).
First question: when I'm looking at a particular battery tester, how can I know what kind it is? Most of the listings don't explicitly say. For example, the Solar BA6 and BA9. They are small, so clearly not carbon pile. They don't say anything about testing a partially discharged battery, but they do read out CCA. Are they conductance testers? Another example, the Solar 100 and the Schumacher BT100. These still look smaller than a carbon pile tester. Are they DC load testers?
Second question: what's with all the different battery standards acronyms? A few I've seen: CCA, CA, DIN, IEC, EN, MCA, JIS, SAE, GB, and BCI. Do these mean anything important or are they just there to puff up the listing?
Third question: I'm a data guy. I love seeing data, so the testers that show the voltage over time appeal to me (they call it a "waveform" but the graph doesn't look much like a wave to me). Can these testers do everything that the more basic testers can do? (comparing e.g. the Ancel BA301 to the BA101, both of which I've seen recommended). I'd love to spring for a Midtronics but I'm a believer in getting something cheap and finding its limitations, so I'm a more informed buyer when I finally shop for the more expensive model. But is this "waveform" display useful? What would you use it for?
I have a lot more questions but I'll stop there for now.
Here's what I've gleaned: there are many different kinds of testers (carbon pile, DC load, AC conductance, EIS). Each has different advantages/disadvantages (which I won't recount here), and forum members have a lot of strong opinions on which one is "best". There are many different brands recommended over the years (Midtronics, Solar/CA Clore, Ancel, Schumacher, to name a few). Some of them have basic grey/black LCD displays, some have backlit displays, and some have fancy color LCD pixel grids like a mobile phone. And some people get upset that anyone buys a tester at all, instead advocating for cranking the car while using a multimeter (presumably the multimeter is built from scrap parts to save extra money).
First question: when I'm looking at a particular battery tester, how can I know what kind it is? Most of the listings don't explicitly say. For example, the Solar BA6 and BA9. They are small, so clearly not carbon pile. They don't say anything about testing a partially discharged battery, but they do read out CCA. Are they conductance testers? Another example, the Solar 100 and the Schumacher BT100. These still look smaller than a carbon pile tester. Are they DC load testers?
Second question: what's with all the different battery standards acronyms? A few I've seen: CCA, CA, DIN, IEC, EN, MCA, JIS, SAE, GB, and BCI. Do these mean anything important or are they just there to puff up the listing?
Third question: I'm a data guy. I love seeing data, so the testers that show the voltage over time appeal to me (they call it a "waveform" but the graph doesn't look much like a wave to me). Can these testers do everything that the more basic testers can do? (comparing e.g. the Ancel BA301 to the BA101, both of which I've seen recommended). I'd love to spring for a Midtronics but I'm a believer in getting something cheap and finding its limitations, so I'm a more informed buyer when I finally shop for the more expensive model. But is this "waveform" display useful? What would you use it for?
I have a lot more questions but I'll stop there for now.
I've seen it happen to techs who put too much faith into a piece of equipment that common sense will tell you has no way of accurately testing a battery.
