kadet wrote:You guys are missing the point I have no doubt that the reading of Voltage and AMPs is accurate. It is the percentage full that is wrong as using voltage to guess the SOC is just that a guess.
And whether you have $15 or a $250 meter seems to make no different.
Those readings indicate to me a fairly heavily discharged battery in bulk mode I would expect the voltage to steadily rise to 14.4volts and the AMPs drop over a couple hours depending on type of charger and battery chemistry.
What I do know is it ain't 92% full

If his meter is wire according to the instructions the amps to the battery on the meter also include any loads that are running at that time. So some of the 8 amps is going to recharging the battery and the rest is going to any loads that might be on at the time like say a laptop, fridge, lighting, etc.
Since the voltage was down in the 13+ volt range I'd guess that whatever was charging the batteries was in the absorption stage of charging. Was the charging source solar, the outboard, both or other?
The meter doesn't base SOC on the voltage. It bases it on the known amp/hr capacity of the battery and then calculates the SOC on following the amps that have gone out of the battery and into the battery and a few other parameters. You set up the meter for the specific battery bank you have.
It is a nice meter but I've had no real problem knowing the general state of charge with a volt meter (also have an amp meter). I generally look at the voltage in the morning with no loads on and before the solar kicks in. Is this totally accurate? No, but I probably know withing 5-10%, which is good enough for me,
Sumner
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