Hi, I have an old and a new SLA battery 12V9AH, and the specs says that it should have an internal resistance of about 18mOhm. But for the life of me I get results of 770 mOhm for the old battery, and about 400 m Ohm for the new battery.
I am measuring the Open Circuit Voltage (V1) and then putting a 20 Ohm (10W) resister across it and measuring the reduced Voltage (V2). I am also measuring the current (I) when under the 20 Ohm load, just to be sure.
Old battery: V1 = 12.73V, V2 = 12.25V, I = 0.62A
New battery: V1 = 12.52V, V2 = 12.27V, I = 0.62A
The new battery has not been charged since I purchased it yesterday. I would have thought that 0.6A is a reasonable current to determine the internal resistance.
What am I doing wrong? We didn't do this type of thing in Engineering. Dave, or anyone, Help! :-)
Just curious, what do you need to know the internal resistance for?
The best test i think is not an absolute measurement but a comparative method.
If you get a new fully charged battery you can measure the voltage and apply a load for a number of seconds, let's say 10 seconds, and immediately note the voltage and write the two down.
Now sometime in the future you do the test again, and write the voltages down.
Then again some time in the future from that test do the test again.
You would repeat this test maybe once a month or something like that and you would accumulate a set of measurements over time and these would be all for the same battery not a different one even if the same make and model.
After a while the voltage at the end of the 10 seconds will start to decrease. This tells you the battery is getting old. Once it gets down so low that it no longer works in the application you wanted it to work in you know you need a new battery.
This tests bypasses the need to know the internal resistance as well as the need to know the current fully charged charge capacity because it measures the most practical aspects of the battery as it relates to the application it is used for.
For a car battery it would be noted that as the final voltage gets too low the engine starts to crank over very slowly. This is especially true in winter so that is a good time to test it.