Geek
Full Member
- Messages
- 1,040
Although there is some merit in this cautious approach, you cannot assess the state of charge of a lead acid battery from the terminal voltage unless one hard-to-achieve condition is met: there has to have been no current into or out of the battery for at least 20 minutes.I always try to stop using power when the voltage is below 12.2 to preserve the battery life.
If you draw a current, it will lower the battery voltage. The higher the current is as a proportion of the storage capacity of the battery, the bigger the voltage drop. The power takes some time to trickle up to.the surface of the plates.
If you put a middling load on the battery until it goes down to 12.2v, then let it rest for half an hour, the voltage will rise to well over 12.2. That higher reading is a better indicator of the state of charge (after adjusting for temperature).





