Battery monitor

Chrisb1701

Free Member
Posts
6
Likes
8
I am thinking of installing a battery monitor
Does anyone have one installed are they worth installing any recommendations for make or model ?

I was looking at the vitron 712 with Bluetooth
 
I am thinking of installing a battery monitor
Does anyone have one installed are they worth installing any recommendations for make or model ?

I was looking at the vitron 712 with Bluetooth
the NASA BM models have a lot of fans and one of the key features with them is the Big Display. they are a fair bit easier to see then the Victron BMVs (the display on the BMV is perfectly readable still. you just have to scroll through to see the different info).
The Victron BMVs however are more capable and flexible and via the Bluetooth App all the info is available on your Smartphone or Tablet. That to me trumps the NASA units.

I have the BMV-712 and find it very good and worth the money. It is the unit I recommend over the NASA Marine BMs in the design builds I do.
A nice feature of the Victron BMVs is the built-in Relay which allows you to control devices based on battery parameters you choose (I have mine setup so the [electric] water heater will not have power if the battery bank is below a certain SOC)
 
Yup went for the BM2 as the display is very clear and easy to read.... Been good as gold over the nearly 3 years since I fitted it.



 
Thank you all for your reply’s given me a lot to think about I do like the bigger display and more information on the screen on the BM models

Back to reading some more reviews
 
Hello
I've an Auto-sleepers fitted Sargent ec480, are the mentioned displays superior in any way?
Graham




The voltag
 
It depends what you want to monitor. Monitoring the voltage is easy, but pretty useless on its own.

The voltage of a battery is only an indication of its remaining charge if no current has flowed in or out of the battery for the last hour or two. Which makes it an impractical measure, even though many people on WC seem to think it tells them something.

In theory you can calculate the state of charge by measuring both the voltage and the current, but the reality is that this is never accurate either, even with fancy calculations involving Peukert's formula.

The only worthwhile way is to monitor the current going in and out and try to keep track. This is fairly reliable as long as the battery is charged right up to the top fairly often, or run right down flat (not recommended!) However accurate they are, small errors can build up, so getting up to 100% from time to time helps keep them accurate.

As far as I can see, the Victror 712 is one of these, with the addition of a bluetooth bit to provide connectivity to an app.

The one I use (which works brilliantly, and has done for many years) looks exactly like DC Battery Monitor Positive Negative Current +/- 30A Voltage 120V Car Volt Meter 754610748905 | eBay which costs less than £15. But if you would rather pay more than ten times as much to be able to open an app instead of looking at a display, that's fine by me!

[Later] Mine must be a bit different because it measures charge currents way over 30A. Perhaps mine is a 50 or 60 amp one. I don't remember, to be honest. It was installed many years ago.

Amp hour counters such as the Victron are excellent for measuring the amounts of power used by the batteries or received by them from a charger over time. However they aren't very accurate for measuring the state of charge of batteries even when using modifications to the calculations for Peukert's formula (as does the Victron). I use a Smartgauge which is from experience the most accurate readily available instrument for measuring the state of charge of a battery. It does this without the need to install a shunt. However it does not perform the other functions of an amp hour counter for which I have a separate unit. For a detailed explanation why the Smartgauge is better for measuring the state of charge please have a read of this webpage. SmartGauge Electronics - SmartGauge compared to Amp Hours Counters
 
I've not used a smartguage, but although I accept most of their criticisms of amp counting meters, I consider their smoke and mirrors calculations to be dubious at best.
Far better to accept that no battery monitor is 100% precise, and to try to get the batteries up to (and past) 100% full on a regular basis. That way the "counting meter" resets itself and is far more accurate than the smartguage which is only guessing.
Of course, the capacity of your battery bank is an unknown in the first place. Yes, each battery may be.nominally 100Ah, but that will only be when it is brand new, at a temperature of 25°c and a discharge current of exactly 5A, and subject to production line variations.
Those conditions cease to apply as soon as it is installed and/or used. You have to use an informed guess to decide what your battery bank's capacity is. You could never be 99% accurate in that, so their quibble that ammeters can often be 1% out is silly.

In fact, when it comes to leisure batteries, most sellers publish the C100 Rating for the battery as being the 'nominal' capacity and not the C20 one - so assuming a 2A discharge current. So when configuring the monitors, you end up using a value that is lower than the 'headline' value (so my AGM batteries are advertised as 110Ah units, but that is the C100 value. For the Victron BMV, I entered their C20 value (95Ah).
And of course no one draws exactly 5A or 2A or anything anyway, so the theoretical available capacity is constantly varying. I pull anything from 1.5A minimum to 180A+ maximum in my setup.

I find the Victron BMV very good in the way its algorithm works out the SOC percentage. I can look at the data in the VRM portal, see precisely how much power has been used, the Ah drawn and when looking at a chart of Discharge current as a 'C' level, the SOC drop looks spot on for that 'style' of usage (be it just a few Amps with the fridge running, or a heavy draw when the Induction Hob or Water Heater is on.
Once I had done that a few times to confirm the data, I no longer need to worry about if the SOC value displayed is correct as I am confident it is - and I occasionally check that by seeing how much net power is going in to get the battery bank upto 100% again.
 
Despite all the complicated stuuf

We have a simple voltmeter connected to the LB

We only have a 85AH battery and we only use vehicle in the summer

A) The meter shows to over 13V and even 14V mid morning if it is sunny
B) Evening it goes down but never below 12.6 V

For us it does the job £5

I sometimes use an inverter (150Watt) off the EB
The onboard meter for the EB is a lighted lozenge display
I only star to use the inverter when all 5 lozenges are showing..once is goes down to 3 I switch the inverter off and wait..
On a moderately sunny day the solar recharges the EB up to 5 lozenges at which point I can use the inverter again
This is a sunny day only procedure...BUT IT WORKS
It I want extended use of the inverter I do so whilst travelling as the alternator and the solar will keep both batteries fully charged.

You do not need anything fancy..Except common (electrical) sense
 
I'm sure you are right. To be quite honest, I wouldn't buy a "leisure" battery in the first place. Normal batteries tend to be a far better buy, if you can't afford Deep Cycle.
I use the term "leisure" battery to distinquish between Starter Batteries and Traction batteries and the ones targetted to the RV & Marine industries rather than a specific subset.
I don't blame the makers as it is one of these things where people generally compare by price and size and if one company used the C20 rating they would appear less competative for what might well be a better quality battery. The only company that comes to mind that quote the C20 by default is Victron.

(I have a feeling that in the US, the standard measure when Ah are quoted is the C20 rating - but they also have this obsession of quoting batteries by their 'group', which makes things a bit confusing as the capacities within a group can vary a fair bit)
 
I've not used a smartguage, but although I accept most of their criticisms of amp counting meters, I consider their smoke and mirrors calculations to be dubious at best.
Far better to accept that no battery monitor is 100% precise, and to try to get the batteries up to (and past) 100% full on a regular basis. That way the "counting meter" resets itself and is far more accurate than the smartguage which is only guessing.
Of course, the capacity of your battery bank is an unknown in the first place. Yes, each battery may be.nominally 100Ah, but that will only be when it is brand new, at a temperature of 25°c and a discharge current of exactly 5A, and subject to production line variations.
Those conditions cease to apply as soon as it is installed and/or used. You have to use an informed guess to decide what your battery bank's capacity is. You could never be 99% accurate in that, so their quibble that ammeters can often be 1% out is silly.
I had a read of the Smartgauge link. I've never used one either and felt the write-up was heavily biased towards a "we're great, the rest is rubbish" angle and was hardly impartial. I would like to read an independent review on the product.

The write-up reminded me of the Charles Sargent video I watched last year talking about running AC fridges via inverters and how his inverter jobby is 10 times better than every other one on the market.
 
.....

The one I use (which works brilliantly, and has done for many years) looks exactly like DC Battery Monitor Positive Negative Current +/- 30A Voltage 120V Car Volt Meter 754610748905 | eBay which costs less than £15. But if you would rather pay more than ten times as much to be able to open an app instead of looking at a display, that's fine by me!

[Later] Mine must be a bit different because it measures charge currents way over 30A. Perhaps mine is a 50 or 60 amp one. I don't remember, to be honest. It was installed many years ago.

This looks the same as yours, but with a higher 150A current rating
DC 0-120V 0-150A Volt Amp Watt Meter Capacity Percent Battery Monitor Test Meter 754610748950 | eBay

And one with a 500A Rating!
DC 0-120V 0-500A Dual Voltage Current Capacity Power Watt Meter Battery Monitor | eBay

They all LOOK the same - I guess it is just the shunt that is different about them. They do look very neat I have to say and at the price could well be worth a punt.

Here are some other options which in price and/or features sit between a basic voltmeter and a NASA Marine or Victron BMV unit:

As far as other meters/monitors go, I tried these in-line on some Solar Panels so I could monitor what has happening
Digital Monitor LCD Watt Meter 60V/100A DC Ammeter RC Battery Power Amp Analyzer 712190256203 | eBay
They worked as expected but ... when I took it apart to check the innards the quality of the build was not very good. if the metal case was slightly pressed it would touch the the solder blob (rather than joint) on the positive connection and short.

These are good units which used a fair bit on general monitoring and solar panel monitoring
AC80-260V 100A LCD Digital Volt Watt Current Power Meter Ammeter Voltmeter BI507 4894663039127 | eBay
The one above is an AC monitor - there are identical ones for DC and for different maximum current limits
I'm using one of these (DC version) in my van on the input to the Victron inverter which is on 24/7 so I can see how much power that (and the stuff connected to it) is using.
It is great for that kind of specific job but the one Hairydog has is better featured if monitoring a battery.


Once which looks very interesting and I am going to get to see how the info matches my BM-712 is this device
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Wireless...T-AMP-AH-SOC-Remaining-Capacity/142637245664?
It doesn't use a shunt, you simply route the battery -ve cable though the sensor. It looks promising, would be very easy for anyone to install I suspect, and is cheap for what it promises. (just like HDs one, there are different options with different current ratings at slightly diffrent prices). There are monitors identical to the one above that DO use a shunt however, so need to check carefully if you want one type over the other.


(PS. None of the links and sellers are anything to do with me.)
 
Last edited:
I bought one of the units above to test and compare to my Victron BMV

This is the Unit I am checking out:

Battery Monitor w/Hall Sensor
by David, on Flickr

And the Victron BMV-712 BT Screenshot

BMV-712
by David, on Flickr

The Voltage is quite a bit different - that is my error really as I am getting the voltage from the top device from a different pickup and AFTER some heavy cable loading.
The Current reading is a wider variation then I would have expected - 173.2A vs 180.0A - so around 5% difference. It could be down to the voltage but it really shouldn't matter for current.
The Wattage is different, but that WILL be down the different voltage reading (P = V*I).

I do like the info on the top monitor - the Ah in the battery counts down in use and the very visual battery gauge is nice as well.
Overall, I think it is a nice unit and worth the £30 odd it costs
 
So to top things off 90% of folk on here are battery gauge watchers rather than go out play,if mine die i buy new ones,but im still going out to play,na na na na.:drive:
 
So to top things off 90% of folk on here are battery gauge watchers rather than go out play,if mine die i buy new ones,but im still going out to play,na na na na.:drive:
A fair observation, but for me, analysing is a hobby of mine :idea-007:, so me doing this (and getting 'toys' etc, that are not maybe really neccessary) is part of the fun and enjoyment of the whole campervan thing. :)



Because of the way the forum quote system works, my replies (in red) will only make sense when referenced back to hairydogs post I am quoting
I think mine is probably a 60 amp one. It seems to be OK.

I have one of those. Seems to work OK for the things I've tested through it, but it is really more of a test tool than a thing to use as a display.

I suspect I have a DC one of these too, but I've never even tried it. I didn't think it measures to and fro current: only shows one direction, which is not what I was looking for at the time. But perhaps it does work with "negative" currents. Can you confirm?
Single Direction only. You can reverse the two sensing wires to read reverse currents. I have used a pair of these with a single shunt, but with one set of wires reversed. You can in that way read the power/current and total power in; and the same again for outbound. Doing this can actually provide more info then many bi-directional meters


That looks interesting, but in general I'm not keen on stuff that uses wireless links. Goes out of date too fast, or just goes wrong. Your subsequent review is what brought me back to look at this thread.
Ref wireless. I am not sure what that is about TBH. there is the little wireless-style symbol in the bottom corner but it is not a feature I am using. The hall sensor and a temp sensor (nice touch having that as standard - the Victron temp sensor costs the same as this whole monitor!) connect to a control box and the monitor connects to the control box via a USB Lead. The Control box also has 2 or 3 relays built in which is a nice touch.
I reckon you can ignore the 'wireless' feature. The downside to this unit is you have to have the monitor pretty close to the battery (unless of course, you used a USB extension lead which I think would work ok). I'll maybe look at the wireless bit, but only out of curiosity rather than neccessity.



I wonder how similar that is to this one: Battery Monitor 6in1 300V 100A State of Charge SOC AH VOLT AMP Charge Discharge 732140263808 | eBay which seems to be more what I wanted. They do look quite similar in the display, but yours has one button and the one I found has two. What do you think?
That looks good. On my similar monitor, the only setting needed was to select the shunt size (50A or 100A), so one button was good enough. Your linked one will of course need setting up for battery bank size so I guess the buttons will feature as up and down amongst other uses.

I wonder how long the cable to the hall sensor is? that could be a big limiting factor on placement. That could potentially be extended, but could also screw the readings as will change cable impedance (so probably not extendable in reality).

The seller in the above link was the same seller for the monitor I just got. It arrive in good time and well packaged, so that is a good sign.
 
Whilst it's a great piece of kit, I may have a BM-1 for sale at/after the New year meet at Hereford, for £50. I need to have a chat to Phil :)


Just in case that helps anyone out...
 
Whilst it's a great piece of kit, I may have a BM-1 for sale at/after the New year meet at Hereford, for £50. I need to have a chat to Phil :)


Just in case that helps anyone out...
£50 for a BM-1 is a great price :)
 

Users who viewed this discussion (Total:0)

Back
Top