Thanks. I thought there battery voltage seemed low too. I charged it with a Schumacher sc-1200a. Supposed to be a smart charger. I also took it to Advance and they ran a test and said battery and charging system are fine.
Is it normal for the fridge to report voltage that is over 0.5v lower than the voltage at the socket it is plugged into? That is really what in trying to find out. It just seems is for there to be that much difference between the socket it's plugged into and what it time it has
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YES and maybe No, The fridge's meter/software was calibrated and setup at the factory but it is anyone's guess how spot on they read, add to that your multi meter again How spot on does it read and trying to find two meters or Dials that read the same drove me to buying the best on the market, In most cases you can get by with taking your multi meter some place and getting it calibrated or at leased get them to check it and tell you how much it is out and when you use it Add or Subtract that amount from your tests, cheapest way it to find a person who works for the National Grid and get them to check your meter with theirs because theirs are checked and Calibrated every 6 to 12 months. and just take a new small 9v Battery along as a test piece and then you will know the answers, Multi meters/Volt meters are a curse, and I have spent some good Coin on getting to the truth and getting it right.
Ya know back a few years ago when solar panels were on my mind I had a heap of multimeters and I could not get any of them to display matching reading and it drove me nutz, so I when to Fluke importers and bought the most top of the line model, Problem solved,
At present I still have that meter and I have a proper sonic type battery tester that gives me a print out of the batteries condition etc which is on par with the fluke, I also have a mid range/priced multi meter which reads within 0.05v and I have one of those power anyalizer things from ebay which although they display all the right numbers on all it's other read outs, Due to the battery being in a battery box the Power doodad can read slightly Hi or Low on the volts.
What sort of a Tester did those guys use because a Drop Test / Direct Short type load tester only shows you if the battery can hold a charge or not, Where as a Sonic tester will show the Voltage and the SOH/State Of Health, and the CCA/CA etc and the batteries Resistance and a heap of other stuff, AGAIN, I had another issue a few months back by being sold the wrong batteries so I bought the sonic tester and this told me that they were selling the wrong batteries,
My point is that fridges are one thing and Wiring is another and to make things worse Batteries are in a world of their own and trying to match all THREE is a nightmare, hence the Fluke and the Sonic Tester, because they told me about the wiring and the power supply/drain but most of all the Batteries, And for the sake of a $100+ bucks that Sonic tester is worth it's weight.
Sorry for the long winded reply but to get it spot on you have to either jump right In or just get it close enough and be happy with that.
So Yes it is normal to see a different reading from the fridge compared to the multi meter at the socket etc again How accurate is the multi meter and how accurate is the meter in the fridge ??,
What bothers me the most is why are those guys telling you that a battery fully charged at 12.42v is in good condition ?? and if so Then I would then say that your multi meter is reading at leased 0.8 volts too low, So either the battery is knackered or the meter is ?? Because if you have 13.2v at the battery using your figures you should have around 12.8 to 13v at the socket, If your battery is as good as those Guys said it is, ??
hope that helps,