説明
A Battery Is Not a Fuel Gauge. It Is a Chemical Promise, and Promises Must Be Verified.
Every lithium-ion cell carries a manufacturer's specification — nominal voltage, rated capacity in milliamp-hours, maximum continuous discharge current. And every lithium-ion cell, from the moment it leaves the factory, begins to deviate from that specification. Temperature cycles alter internal resistance. Partial discharges create capacity memory artifacts. Aging electrolytes reduce ion mobility. By the time a battery has completed 300 cycles, its actual capacity may be 15% to 40% below its rated value, and every device that depends on it — drone, power tool, medical instrument, solar storage bank — is operating on borrowed data. The Capacity Arbiter does not guess. It measures, under controlled load, with four-wire Kelvin sensing, and it reports the truth without embellishment.
This is a 150W programmable DC electronic load and battery capacity tester built around a CNC-machined aluminum housing, a 2.4-inch TFT color display, and a four-wire measurement architecture that separates current-carrying conductors from voltage-sensing conductors at the terminal block. This is the same measurement topology used in laboratory-grade electronic loads costing ten times as much: by eliminating the voltage drop across the load wires from the measurement circuit, four-wire Kelvin sensing ensures that the voltage the tester reads at the battery terminals is the actual terminal voltage, not the terminal voltage minus IR drop. For a single 18650 cell under a 2A discharge, the difference is small. For a 48V LiFePO4 battery bank under a 10A discharge through meter-long leads, the difference between a two-wire and four-wire measurement can exceed 200mV — enough to trigger premature cutoff and under-report capacity by 5–8%.
The tester supports constant-current discharge up to 150W total dissipation, constant-power mode, and constant-resistance mode — the latter being essential for characterizing batteries under loads that mimic actual device behavior rather than laboratory conditions. The firmware logs voltage, current, power, accumulated capacity (mAh and Wh), and energy to an onboard memory buffer with 1-second resolution, and exports the dataset over USB as CSV for analysis in any spreadsheet application. The cooling system uses a temperature-controlled fan with a CNC-machined aluminum heatsink that maintains junction temperatures below 85°C even at full 150W load — no thermal throttling, no derating curve to memorize. The power input is flexible: 12V DC via barrel jack or 5V via USB-C, which means it can run from a bench power supply, a car accessory outlet, or even a laptop USB port for low-power cell testing.
The most expensive battery is the one whose capacity you never verified before trusting it with your mission.
Key Features
- ✦ Four-Wire Kelvin Measurement — Separates current path from voltage sense path; eliminates lead-resistance error from capacity calculations.
- ✦ 150W DC Electronic Load — Programmable constant-current, constant-power, and constant-resistance discharge modes.
- ✦ 2.4-inch TFT Color Display — Real-time voltage, current, power, capacity (mAh + Wh), energy, and elapsed time readout.
- ✦ USB Data Logging — CSV export at 1-second resolution; compatible with Excel, Google Sheets, Python, and MATLAB.
- ✦ CNC Aluminum Housing with Active Cooling — Temperature-controlled fan + machined heatsink; no thermal throttling at full 150W load.
- ✦ Dual Power Input — 12V DC barrel jack or 5V USB-C; runs from bench supply, car outlet, or laptop.
- ✦ Wide Voltage Range — Tests single-cell Li-Ion (3.7V nominal) through 48V LiFePO4 battery banks.
Technical Specifications
- Maximum Power: 150W continuous dissipation
- Voltage Range: 1.5V – 60V DC (input measurement)
- Current Range: 0.05A – 10A (programmable in 1mA steps)
- Measurement Topology: Four-wire (Kelvin) sensing
- Discharge Modes: Constant Current (CC), Constant Power (CP), Constant Resistance (CR)
- Display: 2.4-inch TFT color LCD, 320×240 resolution
- Data Logging: USB serial, CSV export, 1-second sampling interval
- Power Input: 12V DC (5.5×2.1mm barrel) or 5V USB-C
- Cooling: Temperature-controlled fan, CNC-machined aluminum heatsink
- Protection: Over-temperature, over-current, reverse polarity, under-voltage cutoff
Application Scenarios
The Capacity Arbiter serves battery rebuilders who test recovered 18650 cells from laptop and power tool packs — the four-wire measurement is essential here because cell holders introduce significant contact resistance that two-wire testers cannot compensate for. It serves drone operators and RC enthusiasts who need to verify pack capacity before long-range flights, where a 10% capacity error is the difference between returning to home and landing in a field. Solar energy system integrators use it to characterize LiFePO4 battery banks before commissioning, ensuring that the actual usable capacity matches the supplier's specification. Electronics repair technicians use it to diagnose devices with unexplained short runtime — the tester identifies whether the battery has degraded or the device's power management circuitry is drawing excess current. And battery researchers and educators use the CSV export function to generate discharge curves that illustrate Peukert's law, internal resistance growth, and capacity fade in real experimental data.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What is the difference between two-wire and four-wire measurement, and why does it matter?
A: In a two-wire measurement, the same pair of wires carries both the discharge current and the voltage-sense signal. The current flowing through the wires creates a voltage drop (V = I × R), and the tester measures the voltage at its own terminals — not at the battery terminals. In a four-wire Kelvin measurement, one pair of wires carries current while a separate pair senses voltage directly at the battery terminals with negligible current flow. The result is that the voltage reading is the true battery terminal voltage, independent of lead resistance. For high-current testing or long leads, the difference can exceed 200mV, which translates to several percentage points of reported capacity.
Q: Can this tester discharge a 48V LiFePO4 battery bank?
A: Yes, the input voltage range is 1.5V to 60V DC. For a 48V nominal LiFePO4 battery bank (actual voltage range approximately 40V–58.4V), the tester can discharge at up to 150W — for example, approximately 2.6A at 58V. Ensure the discharge current does not exceed 10A at lower voltages, and stay within the 150W power limit at higher voltages.
Q: How do I access the logged data after a test completes?
A: Connect the tester to a computer via USB. The tester enumerates as a serial (COM) port. Open any serial terminal application at 115200 baud, 8N1, and the tester will stream CSV-formatted data with headers: timestamp, voltage, current, power, capacity_mAh, capacity_Wh, energy_J. You can capture this stream to a file or import it directly into Excel, Google Sheets, or Python for plotting discharge curves.
Q: Does the tester automatically stop at a programmable cutoff voltage?
A: Yes, both the under-voltage cutoff and the over-temperature cutoff are user-programmable. The tester will terminate the discharge when either threshold is reached and hold the final capacity reading on the display. This protects the battery from over-discharge damage and allows unattended testing of large battery banks.
Q: Can I test multiple cells at once?
A: This is a single-channel tester — it measures one battery or battery pack at a time. For multi-cell testing, multiple units can be connected to the same computer via a USB hub, with each unit identified by its COM port number. The CSV output from each unit can be merged in post-processing to compare cell-to-cell consistency within a pack.
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