@Burgerman - Fair comments I appreciate it won't give me dependable readings, I'm not expecting a Fluke for less than £30. For me the interesting thing about this product is that it measures and analyses much more than voltage for which the claimed accuracy is +/- 0.03V.
You missed the point. My fluke wouldnt tell me the state of charge either. It is nothing to do with its accuracy its because of the way lead batteries work. So it CANNOT know the state of charge, only its voltage. Which is a totally different thing. UNLESS you disconnect the battery, wait 16 hours, then compare to the batt manufacturers state of charge V voltage chart @ the specified temp - normally 25C.
It also checks Cold Cranking Amperage,
It cant.
It estimates that - and uses a default average for the peukert value, based on its inacurate impedance reading. I doubt it can accurately read impedance either for several reasons, including that it would need an in built 1k cycle AC voltage generator and 4 wires.
and gives a warning if the preset low voltage level has been reached.
What voltage will you set?
Because a battery that is sat with a permanant low drain on it will read around 12.4V even if its 80% charged. And a battery that doesent have this, will read 12.8V. So any fixed voltage point will not tell you the state of charge, only its voltage!
It also has a data logging function that constantly records battery state over 30 days (I think), this would be handy for showing trends with variation in battery use.
Maybe... Depends. Better some info rather than non, but you seem to think it behaves like a lipo hobby battery. It doesent.
I'm sure it'll be far from perfect and I appreciate interpretation of any data is dependant on my understanding of how lead acid batteries work. Unlike yours my WAV is garaged so solar wouldn't be the answer, I'm thinking of fitting a charging port to the van so I can leave it on charge when not expecting to use it for a few days.
YES. You want something set to 13.2V. Not more, not less. Thats is what you need to keep the battery topped up and not cooked long term.
I use one of these:
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/395664524092I have one on my van. I have another on each lead chair I have sat unused. Set to 13.2V or 26.4.
In the meantime the BT2000 should tell me if the battery charge state is low enough to need a charge before I attempt to start the van, I'll also get a better idea of how quickly battery discharges when van is idle.
No it wont. And if its anything less than 100% charged, then it is gradually sulfating and dying.
@LROBBINS - I didn't realise (until now) that current drain is an endemic problem with WAV's, thanks for pointing it out though
Not JUST weelchair vans. ALL modern vehicles with remote entry, clocks, a permanantly active memory in the engine management system, radio clocks, alarms and immobilisers.
Unless driven several times a week the battery will soon die and need replacement. Or fail to start. Lead based batteries *must* sit FULLY charged when not in use or suffer a very short lifespan.