Question:
How do battery testers work?
hotahotahotaizze
2006-03-07 12:44:11 UTC
On some batteries (Energizer, Duracell?), it has little pressure buttons. When you press them it tells you how much room is left on the battery for energy. How do they work? And would it be possible to use that technology for a different product?
Four answers:
kirchwey
2006-03-07 15:40:20 UTC
The conducting ink forms a resistor which does load the battery. The thermochromic strip lies along the resistor and responds to the heat it generates. The resistor is tapered, so its resistance per unit length increases as it gets narrower, and so does the temperature due to current flow. The point along the strip where the temperature reaches the color-change value depends on the amount of current flowing in the resistor. Thus the length of the changed color section indicates battery freshness. This is a very approximate test. A better tester loads the battery similarly, but measures the battery voltage under such loading.
WC
2006-03-07 12:49:39 UTC
The pressure buttons on some alkaline batteries does not give you a true picture of how good the battery is. A good battery tester tests the battery by testing it under a load,by adding resistance to it. This tell you more accurately the condition of the battery under working conditions.
kmagn13
2006-03-07 12:45:40 UTC
A battery Testers work by using a chemical reaction to show about how much "Juice" it has left.
Nacho Massimino
2006-03-07 12:50:52 UTC
They use thermocromic and conductive ink. The first one changes colour with temperature and conductive ink can conduct electricity.



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http://home.howstuffworks.com/question423.htm


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