- Joined
- Sep 4, 2014
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What started out as a joke between me and RM has become an actual test, As I said to RM that I would do a test just for him I got a brainwave and decided to pick the oldest of my 3 X 115A/h batteries and just try and see how long it would run my ARB 47L Fridge, Anyways I had it fully charged and let it rest for 8 to 10 hours and fitted it in a battery box that I just bought that came with a pair of external terminals and a Cigar lighter socket and an LED meter on it,
So once fitted I clamped on my Fluke DMM and plugged in the fridge and set the Battery Cut Off to Hi which is about 11.80v under load and about 12.12 Open voltage which is some where up around the 40% state of Charge mark,, Well this has gone on for a few days now and it is still blazing away doing it's thing and every thing was fine until I phone the bloke at the solar shop, And I nearly gave him an ear bashing But I kept my cool, anyways he proceeded to tell me my battery was flat and then tried to tell me about my fridge, That did not sit well with me and when He said that my battery was flat and then half flat when it had over 12.5 volts in it that was it,
So I asked him to explain why it was half flat when all the charts and battery Guru's say otherwise "NO ANSWER", so I resigned to the fact that he was in Lala Land, so I got a load of Battery SOC Graphs and they all said the same as me, I checked the battery hourly with the Fluke DMM and used the battery tester on the Battery Box and me and the Fluke and the Battery box all came up with the same figures,
I know that temperature in different parts of the world can have an effect on a batteries state of charge and I have graphs that show this, I guess the guy at the solar shop only knows about batteries that are being charged 24/7 so he would not be use to seeing these sort of numbers, Lol.
Anyways here is a good chart that explains it all just about and here is my Fluke DMM as the battery hit the 90 Hour Mark. And this meter is extremely accurate and I bought it direct from Fluke UK and they even tested it in their Calibration House while I was there So I know this is right.
J.
So once fitted I clamped on my Fluke DMM and plugged in the fridge and set the Battery Cut Off to Hi which is about 11.80v under load and about 12.12 Open voltage which is some where up around the 40% state of Charge mark,, Well this has gone on for a few days now and it is still blazing away doing it's thing and every thing was fine until I phone the bloke at the solar shop, And I nearly gave him an ear bashing But I kept my cool, anyways he proceeded to tell me my battery was flat and then tried to tell me about my fridge, That did not sit well with me and when He said that my battery was flat and then half flat when it had over 12.5 volts in it that was it,
So I asked him to explain why it was half flat when all the charts and battery Guru's say otherwise "NO ANSWER", so I resigned to the fact that he was in Lala Land, so I got a load of Battery SOC Graphs and they all said the same as me, I checked the battery hourly with the Fluke DMM and used the battery tester on the Battery Box and me and the Fluke and the Battery box all came up with the same figures,
I know that temperature in different parts of the world can have an effect on a batteries state of charge and I have graphs that show this, I guess the guy at the solar shop only knows about batteries that are being charged 24/7 so he would not be use to seeing these sort of numbers, Lol.
Anyways here is a good chart that explains it all just about and here is my Fluke DMM as the battery hit the 90 Hour Mark. And this meter is extremely accurate and I bought it direct from Fluke UK and they even tested it in their Calibration House while I was there So I know this is right.
J.