Anyone have a procedure for testing old(er) batteries to determine what what their effective 20 hour rating would be?
I have a pair of Costco GC2 6 volt batteries that are now 4 years old. Water has gone low on them at some point so I expect their 20 amp hour rating is significantly less than new. I have a Victron BMV602 to measure current/consumed AH/State of Charge/Voltage.
I'd like to adjust the the Battery Capacity (Cb) (& Peukert exponent?) to approximate what it is now. I see Maine Sail drops a few percent off each year for capacity, but I'd like something a little more accurate.
I ran lights for a few hours and pulled out 3 Amp Hours and my voltage is still at 12.81 which is still a full charge.
I'm guessing I need to pull out 50 AH or so, let the batteries rest overnight unloaded, measure the voltage and figure out the state of charge from a state of charge graph and then use some algebra to figure out the battery capacity?
I have a pair of Costco GC2 6 volt batteries that are now 4 years old. Water has gone low on them at some point so I expect their 20 amp hour rating is significantly less than new. I have a Victron BMV602 to measure current/consumed AH/State of Charge/Voltage.
I'd like to adjust the the Battery Capacity (Cb) (& Peukert exponent?) to approximate what it is now. I see Maine Sail drops a few percent off each year for capacity, but I'd like something a little more accurate.
I ran lights for a few hours and pulled out 3 Amp Hours and my voltage is still at 12.81 which is still a full charge.
I'm guessing I need to pull out 50 AH or so, let the batteries rest overnight unloaded, measure the voltage and figure out the state of charge from a state of charge graph and then use some algebra to figure out the battery capacity?