Author Topic: Rechargeable AAA, AA, C and D cell checking, any recommended gadgets?  (Read 3615 times)

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Offline MKTopic starter

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Hi everyone,

I have accumulated far too many AA, and other rechargable batteries and recon that quite a few should be retired, are there any off the shelf cheap and trustworthy gadgets to check the actual remaing capacity of the cells?

Any particular recommendations of units to consider buying?
« Last Edit: May 12, 2017, 02:05:20 pm by MK »
 

Offline jimmc

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Same problem here. If you want cheap and cheerful ZB2L3 Battery Capacity Tester External Load Discharge Type Module does the job for me.

Jim
 

Offline james_s

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There are lots of inexpensive battery testers out there. Just beware the really cheap stuff is rarely accurate at all. I have several different ones from banggood and such that were terrible, I modified them with a pot and calibrated them so they're ok. Better to buy something reputable though.
 

Offline MacMeter

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Hi everyone,

I have accumulated far too many AA, and other rechargable batteries and recon that quite a few should be retired, are there any off the shelf cheap and trustworthy gadgets to check the actual remaing capacity of the cells?

Any particular recommendations of units to consider buying?

I use my Maha Powerex MH-C9000 charger that is capable of testing for "capacity". (Amazon $60)

For quick charge testing I use a ZTS MBT-1 "pulse load tester", NOT CHEAP:
https://www.ztsinc.com/mbt1.html
 

Offline stj

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http://lygte-info.dk/review/Review%20Charger%20LiitoKala%20Lii-500%20UK.html

available from the usual chinese shops at a good price.
 

Offline todd_fuller

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For quick charge testing I use a ZTS MBT-1 "pulse load tester", NOT CHEAP:
https://www.ztsinc.com/mbt1.html

I have one of these. I like it quite a lot. If you do consider one of these devices, note that they have a few models and not all models support common cell types. I originally got it to test coin cells and not every one of their devices can test coin cells.
 

Offline Audioguru

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I have many AAA Ni-MH cells. I simply measure their maximum current with my DMM. A good one measures 8A (the resistance of the leads and the shunt resistor inside the meter limit the current) and if a weak one measures less than 0.7A then I retire it. My meter might blow a fuse if I measure the maximum current of an AA, C or D Ni-MH cell.
 

Online Chalcogenide

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I bought an Opus BT-C700 NiMh smart charger, and it does a pretty good job at measuring cell capacity. It even has the ability to measure the cell ESR. http://lygte-info.dk/review/Review%20Charger%20Opus%20BT-C700%20UK.html
Only accepts AA and AAA cells, tough.
 

Offline retiredcaps

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I bought an Opus BT-C700 NiMh smart charger, and it does a pretty good job at measuring cell capacity.
I originally posted the same, but then deleted my reply because it doesn't measure C or D cells, but over the last 9 months I have had, it seems to work as advertised.  I got mine for $17 USD + free shipping to Canada from ebay.

Some of my really old (6+ years) used and abused Eneloops AA with 800+ cycles still measure around 1850mAh (2000mAh advertised).

Some ebay generic AA cells that are advertised as 2500mAh measure around 600mAh, which is no surprise to me.
 

Offline edavid

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Same problem here. If you want cheap and cheerful ZB2L3 Battery Capacity Tester External Load Discharge Type Module does the job for me.

This is what I use, and it works very well if you don't mind testing one cell at a time.

Read more about it here:
https://syonyk.blogspot.com/2015/10/zb2l3-v20-zhiyu-battery-tester.html

Buy it on eBay or AliExpress for $4 to $5:
http://www.ebay.com/itm/NEW-1-2-12V-battery-capacity-tester-external-load-discharge-capacity-test-18650N-/302156730294
 

Offline MKTopic starter

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Hi JimC, I got one of those for £2.74, pretty good for one at a time testing.

Hi stj, I got one of those for £19.89 and it does larger cells too, but I need the one above for the few d cells I have.

The others were also interesting.

Thanks for the responses.

MK
 


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