toolenthusiast
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jan 21, 2017
- Messages
- 723
There are a lot of highly knowledgeable people in this thread, and it’s great to read all these details about the theory and practice of battery testing.
That being said, I’m not going to start dragging out my oscilloscope for battery tests. I can report that I’ve been very satisfied with this cheap tester from O’Reilly:

I think that my experience with battery testing is much different than most people. DIYers get a chance to monitor vehicles over a long period of time, but they only work on a handful of vehicles. Mechanics work on all sorts of cars, but they generally only have their hands on the vehicles for hours or days. I work in a body shop, which is much different. We routinely have possession of customer vehicles for 2 months or more (especially with today’s supply chain issues). I can use my inexpensive tester when the car comes in the shop and have a very good idea of a battery’s real, functional level of health: will it be OK if the car sits for 2 weeks waiting on parts? Will it die if I need to keep the car at KOEO for a while? Was the battery internally damaged by the collision?
It’s never given me a false positive or a false negative that I’ve been able to identify. The thing has a charging system test built in, too. And it’s only $40.
That being said, I’m not going to start dragging out my oscilloscope for battery tests. I can report that I’ve been very satisfied with this cheap tester from O’Reilly:

I think that my experience with battery testing is much different than most people. DIYers get a chance to monitor vehicles over a long period of time, but they only work on a handful of vehicles. Mechanics work on all sorts of cars, but they generally only have their hands on the vehicles for hours or days. I work in a body shop, which is much different. We routinely have possession of customer vehicles for 2 months or more (especially with today’s supply chain issues). I can use my inexpensive tester when the car comes in the shop and have a very good idea of a battery’s real, functional level of health: will it be OK if the car sits for 2 weeks waiting on parts? Will it die if I need to keep the car at KOEO for a while? Was the battery internally damaged by the collision?
It’s never given me a false positive or a false negative that I’ve been able to identify. The thing has a charging system test built in, too. And it’s only $40.