Is Your Battery Monitor is Accurate..?

Feb 6, 1998
11,759
Canadian Sailcraft 36T Casco Bay, ME
This one has been on my mind for a very long time, and folks have been after me, but I just needed some time to sit down and punch it out. My daughter was on school vacation last week so I got 30 minutes here and there to peck away at it..

Programming A Battery Monitor (LINK)
 
May 10, 2008
392
Catalina 355 Boston
Excellent write up MS. It's great that you put everything related to this topic in one place. Unless you followed this topic over the years through the various threads, you can see why there are so many myths and misinformation that gets repeated over time. Had a similar conversation with the President of Rolls Battery over the weekend and he said he can only roll his eyes when he hears some of the stuff that comes from customers regarding monitoring batteries....

Well done!
 
May 23, 2004
3,319
I'm in the market as were . Colonial Beach
That is some complicated stuff! I had a link 10 on my Catalina 30 and I would imagine that it was never right!

After reading that I may just hold off for a while and buy a smart gauge. That seems like a better set-up for me.

Good article....I bet Mainesail has nightmares about battery banks, battery monitors, and Perk's exponent. LOL:eek::eek:
 

weinie

.
Sep 6, 2010
1,297
Jeanneau 349 port washington, ny
Wow! It almost seems that the way people have been using these battery monitors that they might have been just as well off if they never even used one (and a few dollars richer to boot)!
 
Sep 25, 2008
544
Bristol 43.3 Perth Amboy
It seems that doing a capacity test is a real pain in the butt. I have 5 batteries wired in parallel and it would be a lot of work! Great article and I enjoyed reading about the smart gauge too. Maine Sail, Can the traditional link monitor when also used with the smart gauge give you an insight into true battery capacity? Start with full charged batteries. Start with an assumption of the bank capacity. Add a DC load at the assumed 20 hr amp hr rate. Do it for 1 hr. See what the smart gauge says the SOC is. If your actual capacity is less than assumed, then the SOC as a percent will be lower than predicted. You now have the ability to calculate a new assumed capacity which won't be exactly accurate because it was computed at a higher than the 20 amp hr discharge rate. Repeat the test using the new assumed capacity. Keep repeating and the assumed will approach the actual minus the amps pulled during the testing. Or one can recharge between tests.
 
Nov 26, 2008
1,970
Endeavour 42 Cruisin
Thanks RC. I will definitely overide the auto feature.

I was surprised at how little specific gravity played into this dissertation. I was expecting or hoping that sg could be used to cross check soc or something similar.
 
Jan 12, 2011
930
Hunter 410 full time cruiser
I'm positive that my BM is programmed correctly except for the real AH of the batteries. I just am not going to be constantly testing the batteries to find the true AH capacity. So far as I'm concerned the BM is only good to tell you the AH out of it, the voltage, and the current. After that you have to guess at the SOC based on those three.

But I think that is probably enough as long as you understand.

Otherwise it is time to add a SmartGage to your system.
 
Feb 26, 2004
23,345
Catalina 34 224 Maple Bay, BC, Canada
1. After that you have to guess at the SOC based on those three.

2. But I think that is probably enough as long as you understand.

3. Otherwise it is time to add a SmartGage to your system.
1. Most algorithms on BMs have a choice to readout SOC, usually in %s. RTFM (Bruce, F stands for Funny!:)).

2. Yes, and see #1, too. :)

3. If you don't want a counter, then get one.

In another recent thread, one of our skippers made up an app for an energy budget. Since the amp draw of most of the stuff we have on our boats hasn't changed in decades, there's no reason to either not use his app or do your own energy budget on a spreadsheet, like this one:

The All-Important Energy Budget:

http://c34.org/bbs/index.php/topic,3976.0.html


What comes OUT is sooooo easy. It's what goes back IN when charging that is harder and where a Smart Gauge or BM really comes in handy.

Battery Acceptance by Stu http://c34.org/bbs/index.php/topic,4787.0.html

And here's another discussion on why overriding the auto reset feature is important. It reflects, in a somewhat different and much longer way, what Maine Sail wrote in his writeup.

For everyone installing a battery monitor: The "Gotcha Algorithm" thread, a "MUST READ"

http://c34.org/bbs/index.php/topic,4922.0.html

DEFAULTS are factory settings that are made to be modified to suit your setup.
 
Oct 2, 2008
3,811
Pearson/ 530 Strafford, NH
My brain can handle The Rube Goldberg SOC test. Do I just need the voltage at the battery posts? Now I just have to get the boat back to 75-80 degrees.

All U Get
 
Jan 22, 2008
597
Oday 35 and Mariner 2+2 Alexandria, VA
Battery Budget

Here is an old spreadsheet posted on the forums once upon a time. It is a great battery management starting point, and easy to adapt to your use.Battery Budget Spreadsheet
 

weinie

.
Sep 6, 2010
1,297
Jeanneau 349 port washington, ny
Maine,
Is there any advantage, other than price of course, to choosing one of these "Ah counters" versus the Balmar Smart gauge for basic, no frills SOC measurement? It would seem that the Balmar easily wins in terms of accuracy, ease of installation, ease of configuration, and ease of use.
 
Feb 6, 1998
11,759
Canadian Sailcraft 36T Casco Bay, ME
Maine,
Is there any advantage, other than price of course, to choosing one of these "Ah counters" versus the Balmar Smart gauge for basic, no frills SOC measurement? It would seem that the Balmar easily wins in terms of accuracy, ease of installation, ease of configuration, and ease of use.
The benefits of an Ah counter are:

Lots of information, Amperage, Ah's consumed, Voltage and SOC (if programmed well), historical data, and a host of other nice to have items. They start at about $170.00 for a decent one though there are pretty crappy models for even less.

The benefits of the Smart Gauge:

Accuracy, simplicity, never having to re-program and ease of installation....

A lot of folks worry and ask about

"With the Smart Gauge I won't know how much I have left?"

and my response to most is;

"The programming on your current Ah counter is so bad you still have no clue how much you have left and may get to a point where you begin to over discharge your bank."



If you use a SG like the fuel gauge in your car you get used to it. "Oh gee I only have 1/8" tank, I know I can make it home."

Most times the car owner has no clue what 1/8 of a tank means, in gallons, (read Ah capacity) nor do they even know how many MPG their vehicle gets (read age fade) but they develop a feel for how long they can go........

There is no perfect battery fuel gauge. The Smart Gauge is the most lifetime accurate but it is simple so owners will have to choose which path they want to go down if they want a battery fuel gauge beyond a typical volt meter.
 
Feb 6, 1998
11,759
Canadian Sailcraft 36T Casco Bay, ME
My brain can handle The Rube Goldberg SOC test. Do I just need the voltage at the battery posts? Now I just have to get the boat back to 75-80 degrees.

All U Get
Yes just battery terminal voltage... Your batteries are sealed so specific gravity is not possible...
 

weinie

.
Sep 6, 2010
1,297
Jeanneau 349 port washington, ny
The benefits of an Ah counter are:

Lots of information, Amperage, Ah's consumed, Voltage and SOC (if programmed well), historical data, and a host of other nice to have items. They start at about $170.00 for a decent one though there are pretty crappy models for even less.

The benefits of the Smart Gauge:

Accuracy, simplicity, never having to re-program and ease of installation....

A lot of folks worry and ask about

"With the Smart Gauge I won't know how much I have left?"

and my response to most is;

"The programming on your current Ah counter is so bad you still have no clue how much you have left and may get to a point where you begin to over discharge your bank."



If you use a SG like the fuel gauge in your car you get used to it. "Oh gee I only have 1/8" tank, I know I can make it home."

Most times the car owner has no clue what 1/8 of a tank means, in gallons, (read Ah capacity) nor do they even know how many MPG their vehicle gets (read age fade) but they develop a feel for how long they can go........

There is no perfect battery fuel gauge. The Smart Gauge is the most lifetime accurate but it is simple so owners will have to choose which path they want to go down if they want a battery fuel gauge beyond a typical volt meter.
Thanks Maine.
I see a SG for me in the near future.
 
Nov 26, 2008
1,970
Endeavour 42 Cruisin
RC
Please clarify for my spinning head...

To disable auto synch I set VC, voltage charged to 14.6v. Is that all I need to change to disable auto synch?

Thanx much

E
 
Feb 6, 1998
11,759
Canadian Sailcraft 36T Casco Bay, ME
RC
Please clarify for my spinning head...

To disable auto synch I set VC, voltage charged to 14.6v. Is that all I need to change to disable auto synch?

Thanx much

E

That was merely an example for a GEL bank that charges at 14.1V. Essentially all you need to do is set charged voltage higher than any of your charge sources are programmed for. You can aloso set tail current to its lowest value and extend charge detection time to max....
 

walt

.
Jun 1, 2007
3,550
Macgregor 26S Hobie TI Ridgway Colorado
I have had a battery monitor for a bunch of years and it is still all I need. However, I never use that "capacity" function.. One reason is that I don’t trust it for all the reasons given in Maine Sails link but I also really never get my battery down below about 20% (which might be off by 50% but that still has a lot of margin).

The one function I wish the battery monitor did was to find the battery impedance (which the balmar gauge likely does). The main thing I would use this for is to just look at battery health when its fully charged. I usually can tell when the battery is getting worn out by noting an unusually high voltage drop when you put on a load or also the battery goes into acceptance limiting "too early" (based on your past experience) when trying to charge the battery. Both of these are the result of increased battery impedance. You can however manually use the battery monitor to get impedance and it’s simply R = delta V / delta I.. You can do this for any state the battery is in. Write down the V and I before you turn on some load and then the V and I after the load. Battery impedance is just delta V / delta I. Next time I get fresh batteries, I’m going to do this for the fully charged battery at rest, keep track of the number and maybe just re-do that test once per year. Unfortanetly I wont know what the results completely mean until I have done this over the life of a battery.

I like knowing the amp hours used by individual loads on the boat – which is what the monitor gives. The Balmar gauges doesn’t give this so I would still rather have the BM with its limitation on capacity accuracy. What would really be ideal is an instrument that both measured current (and integrated current) plus all the stuff the Balmar gauge does.

I am barely organized enough to add water to my batteries twice a year.. doing all of the below in addition for that percent capacity reading.. seriously??? And it will likely be inaccurate one year later..

Must Do Bare Minimum Programming Steps:
-Program Accurate Ah Capacity Of Your Bank (obtain through testing)

-Program Your Banks Peukert’s Constant (obtain from battery manufacturer or calculate)

-Program Your Banks Charge Efficiency (obtain from battery manufacturer)

-Program Your Battery Temp (Should be done at least monthly if temps change or use model with temp sensor)
 
Feb 6, 1998
11,759
Canadian Sailcraft 36T Casco Bay, ME
I have had a battery monitor for a bunch of years and it is still all I need. However, I never use that "capacity" function.. One reason is that I don’t trust it for all the reasons given in Maine Sails link but I also really never get my battery down below about 20% (which might be off by 50% but that still has a lot of margin).

The one function I wish the battery monitor did was to find the battery impedance (which the balmar gauge likely does). The main thing I would use this for is to just look at battery health when its fully charged. I usually can tell when the battery is getting worn out by noting an unusually high voltage drop when you put on a load or also the battery goes into acceptance limiting "too early" (based on your past experience) when trying to charge the battery. Both of these are the result of increased battery impedance. You can however manually use the battery monitor to get impedance and it’s simply R = delta V / delta I.. You can do this for any state the battery is in. Write down the V and I before you turn on some load and then the V and I after the load. Battery impedance is just delta V / delta I. Next time I get fresh batteries, I’m going to do this for the fully charged battery at rest, keep track of the number and maybe just re-do that test once per year. Unfortanetly I wont know what the results completely mean until I have done this over the life of a battery.

I like knowing the amp hours used by individual loads on the boat – which is what the monitor gives. The Balmar gauges doesn’t give this so I would still rather have the BM with its limitation on capacity accuracy. What would really be ideal is an instrument that both measured current (and integrated current) plus all the stuff the Balmar gauge does.

I am barely organized enough to add water to my batteries twice a year.. doing all of the below in addition for that percent capacity reading.. seriously??? And it will likely be inaccurate one year later..
Unfortunately battery impedance tells us little about actual Ah capacity. I have a Group 31 battery that just underwent testing for a marine publication and that article will be published in the next few months. It's as new capacity was 104.5Ah's (factory rating 105 Ah's) after the testing (rather abusive testing) it is now in the 73Ah range for Ah capacity.

The Midtronics, Argus and cheap Chinese impedance testers all pass this battery with flying colors with all EXCEEDING new "capacity" in ranges from 109% to 130% of factory rating.

Unfortunately this battery is performing at 30% BELOW its factory Ah rating.

It is more complicated than just impedance unfortunately. If you want to know cranking capacity impedance testers or measurements do rather well. If you want to know usable long term slow rate discharge capacity, like we use on boats, they don't do this well....

You can learn to interpret them better but impedance testers do not translate to Ah capacity well enough for the avergae user to glean any good data from them........


EDIT: Rather than try to explain it I just punched out this article so it can be seen:

Are Impedance Testers Worth It? (LINK)