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Which Battery Tester

Greatwhitewing

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 20, 2011
Messages
531
I have narrowed my battery tester choices down to 2

Midtronics PBT-300

And the ESI 725

Nearly identical in cost and features look very similar. I really like the idea of the testing the charging and starting system. I know Tooltopia is a few bucks cheaper.

Just went through several battery/Alternator issues where one of these things would have saved me time in the decision process.
 
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bigdav160

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 14, 2007
Messages
2,027
Location
Deep in the heart of Texas
I have that midtronics as a cheap example of a conductance tester. The down side to that tester is the battery has to have a pretty good state of charge to test unlike the more expensive midtronic models. Ours has been reliable but doesn't always agree with the results from a heavy load test.

I know nothing of the other model. Alternator ripple can be checked with a DVOM though.
 

theoldwizard1

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 22, 2011
Messages
43,250
Location
SE MI
IMHO, the BEST battery/charging/starting system tester was the old SUN VAT (various models). 2 key features that I have not seen on ant other tester since then.


  • Carbon pile adjustable load cell
  • True "inline" ammeter
 
OP
G

Greatwhitewing

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 20, 2011
Messages
531
IMHO, the BEST battery/charging/starting system tester was the old SUN VAT (various models). 2 key features that I have not seen on ant other tester since then.


  • Carbon pile adjustable load cell
  • True "inline" ammeter

I know there are BETTER ones out there and if were a professional I would invest in something more capable but for home use I need to balance budget vs performance. These two candidates seem like a reasonable compromise between the two.
 
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wild cowboy

Banned
Joined
Mar 11, 2014
Messages
1,650
Location
Birmingham
for the money, the HF carbon pile tester is hard to beat, along with my Fluke 87's ammeter, have had both for a long time. $38 after 25% off coupon!

www.harborfreight.com/500-amp-carbon-pile-load-tester-91129.html

W1ntf3u.jpg
 
Last edited:

signcrafter

Well-known member
Joined
May 9, 2012
Messages
12,494
for the money, the HF carbon pile tester is hard to beat, along with my Fluke 87's ammeter, have had both for a long time. $38 after 25% off coupon!

I wasn't sure I'd ever say this but I agree with you on this one!:beer:

There are a few different ways to test a battery and charging system. Stick did a really nice write up a few years ago if you search this site for post by him. A carbon pile and a good meter can load test the battery and also load test the charging system. A midtronics style tester is a nice fast easy way to test most batteries. For a shop that tests lots of batteries the midtronics is the way to go since it's quicker. For a home guy the carbon pile and DMM is probably the way to go. I have both and use both at different times.
 

Jdsmith

Active member
Joined
Nov 24, 2012
Messages
42
Location
Ohio
I have the Harbor Freight carbon pile and I use it with a Fluke 87 to measure battery voltage. I also use a Fluke 337 to measure the current. As I recall the ammeter on the tester was off by 25% or so. Since I already had the meters the total investment of $35 results in about the most accurate and trustworthy way to test a starting battery, other than the big associated carbon pile unit or trended conductance measurements like we take quarterly on big flooded UPS batteries in data centers.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
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