Coin battery testing

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  • Опубликовано: 28 июл 2024
  • How to test coin cell batteries.
    more info at: heiltronics.wordpress.com/201...
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Комментарии • 149

  • @skiwi33
    @skiwi33 Год назад +40

    Best to put a resister across the 2 tester leads. 4.7kohm works well. This puts a load on the battery and is a much more reliable way to tell actual health of the battery

    • @U2BER2012
      @U2BER2012 Год назад

      Thanks for the tip.

    • @kpadalldotablet1009
      @kpadalldotablet1009 Год назад +3

      This test doesn't show anything except if it is under 2.8 volts it's really bad. They can still measure like he is doing it as good and be bad. As skiwi said, you need to load test a battery.

    • @810PRODUCTIONS
      @810PRODUCTIONS 4 месяца назад +3

      Anyone that is unaware that a load needs to be applied to properly test button or coin batteries has no business producing videos on the topic of batteries. Half of the population appears to be a bunch of self proclaimed uneducated professionals that put others in harms way.

    • @Mottenfest
      @Mottenfest 4 месяца назад +1

      I'm very new to this. Do you have a video or written tutorial you can suggest that would help me understand testing under a load? Thank you! ✌️

    • @810PRODUCTIONS
      @810PRODUCTIONS 4 месяца назад

      @@Mottenfest A simple and easy load would be a LED(light emitting diode) light bulb. Locate a cheap little keyring LED light and remove the casing/shell and extract the bulb/diode. The bulb has a positive prong and a negative prong. Most of these single LED bulbs are rated for a single 3v coin battery, or two 3v coin batteries stacked in a series that equates to 6v total. In most situations, a LED light that is meant for 6v will still manage to luminate when exposed to only 3v, just not to the full brightness. The LED bulb does not mark which prong is positive and which prong is negative, so that is up to you to determine, but at least there are only two possible combinations. Take the bulb and place a new/fresh coin battery between the two prongs and pinch the two prongs against the two faces of the coin battery,... if the bulb does not luminate, reverse the battery and do it again. If the coin battery is good, it will have luminated the bulb during one of the two placement combinations. If a coin battery is bad, it will not achieve full brightness, anywhere from a little less bright to very dim. Rarely do I ever test a coin battery that is fully dead resulting in no lumination whatsoever. Ensure you test the LED bulb with a fresh coin battery so you know how bright the LED bulb is supposed to be. Use a standard red, green, or blue LED light. Make sure not to use a purple color "curing", or "sanitizing" LED light, as they can cause damage to your vision when looked at directly. Standard red, green, or blue LED's are not dangerous to look directly at for a brief moment as long as it is held at an arm distance away.

  • @halleffect1
    @halleffect1 2 года назад +16

    You have to check these with a slight load applied to remove any surface charge. you can't trust a mulimeter reading otherwise.

    • @dfor50
      @dfor50 2 года назад +3

      Absolutely. They can test good with that simple test but fail under load when they are quickly exhausted of charge.

    • @skiwi33
      @skiwi33 Год назад +5

      Best to put a resister across the 2 tester leads. 4.7kohm works well. This puts a load on the battery and is a much more reliable way to tell actual health of the battery,

  • @no1unorightnow
    @no1unorightnow 2 года назад +5

    Oh good, you showed the voltage curves!
    The suck thing about non-alkaline is that it could meter fine, but still be at the end of its life, just right before the cliff.

  • @PolarZeus
    @PolarZeus 3 года назад +4

    i came in here confused and i left with more knowledge! thank you for a simple and easy video !

  • @physicsguybrian
    @physicsguybrian 3 года назад +16

    Measuring a battery under no load conditions is NOT a good test. It must be tested under load to be sure.

  • @babyd755
    @babyd755 2 года назад

    The information and tutorial I needed within 1 minute and 30 seconds. Thank you!

  • @mgr5550
    @mgr5550 3 года назад +12

    This doesnt mean a battery is good. Some will show 3v under nil load. But the moment you pop it into a device it wont perform bec the voltage will drop. How to measure the MAH on the battery to tell if it has juice left for service life ?

    • @janqs2459
      @janqs2459 Год назад +1

      The guy in the video doesn't have to much knowledge about electricity. He just touched the easiest way to explain it.
      Seeing 3v or above on the meter doesn't mean that the battery is good. At all. To get it right , you have to do the Amp reading , which for 3V new battery shud read around 8.2 mA

  • @ShellBell1515
    @ShellBell1515 9 месяцев назад

    Appreciate your information and easy to understand - like the diagram comparison showing the different types of coin batteries.

  • @lionellavallee1919
    @lionellavallee1919 4 года назад

    I have a l1131 is that also 1.5 volts??

  • @johnhansen-beadle3056
    @johnhansen-beadle3056 2 года назад +1

    Excellent & clear video. I still struggle a bit with the settings on the multimeter and of course they all seem to be set up differently. Maybe add more on the setting up of the multimeter at the start i.e. Where the black & red leads are plugged into and why.

  • @lund905360
    @lund905360 3 года назад +5

    What about resistance ?????
    You shoud put some resistance ???
    Tell me if I am wrong ????

    • @Tech-49
      @Tech-49 6 месяцев назад

      You are wrong

  • @CoconutPalmPictures
    @CoconutPalmPictures 3 года назад

    I tried this with my Harbor Freight VOM, and it said "1", with no decimal point or other numbers. Same thing for an old battery nd a new battery. What does that mean?

  • @neurofiber2406
    @neurofiber2406 3 года назад +4

    Unfortunately, batteries under load read less...

  • @charlesdarnay5455
    @charlesdarnay5455 4 года назад +18

    Thank you for keeping it simple and getting right to the point. A breath of fresh air. Simple, clear, quick and no distractions. Wish more how-to videos would follow your example.

  • @Janus5691
    @Janus5691 Год назад

    Question. I have a 3v CR2016 battery which when tested on a traditional battery tester with wired leads tests well into the "good" zone. However, when tested on the BT-168 handheld tester which I am sure you are familiar with, the pointer does not move remaining way over to the start of the red or "replace" zone. Why the discrepancy? Also, I tested the battery on a multimeter and got a reading of 2.9 volts. Any ideas?

  • @thomassmearcheck2819
    @thomassmearcheck2819 3 года назад

    Nice video ! I have a wireless door bell , the push button works in the house but not in cold weather is there anything I can do to make it work , Ive changed batteries a few times. Thanks

  • @vidhansharan
    @vidhansharan 3 года назад

    Superb Explanation. Thanks Sir. Each and everything is clear.

  • @melodychest9020
    @melodychest9020 3 года назад

    Totally cool .. gotta love your intro and end robot music!

  • @terrapinflyer273
    @terrapinflyer273 2 года назад +3

    Check out that savvy button flip! Thanks for this! Every other explaination I viewed was way too complicated for my purposes. While I do want to learn how to utilize a multimeter, I just want to know if my buttons are good right now lol. Thanks again!

    • @ND_US
      @ND_US 2 года назад +1

      Simple explanation or dead wrong explaination because this is complicate matter so it's required complicate explaination.

  • @Recipro1
    @Recipro1 Год назад

    Thanks for your time and teaching ,buddy

  • @trinadora
    @trinadora 11 месяцев назад

    Outstanding explanation. Very helpful. Thanks for creating this clip.

  • @jonasfjellhauggressnes7365
    @jonasfjellhauggressnes7365 11 месяцев назад

    I don't know if those batteries are comparable but the difference in discharge time is wild!. Lithium has almost ten times the runtime of the other batteries.
    Very interesting to see the silver battery. It's practically fully charged, until it's dead.

  • @FURDOG1961
    @FURDOG1961 11 месяцев назад +1

    0:00 Voltage rating/testing coin batteries.
    2:15
    4:15 Different types of batteries.

  • @klecoxs2
    @klecoxs2 2 года назад

    Straight and to the point thanks for posting 👌

  • @GJM866
    @GJM866 2 года назад

    Excellent video, thanks for posting!

  • @kashyap1991
    @kashyap1991 3 месяца назад

    If you recharge this cells again they are good to go ?

  • @1Daddoz1
    @1Daddoz1 2 года назад +1

    Cool! Thanks for sharing your knowledge.

  • @mrg466
    @mrg466 4 года назад +2

    Ahh, very, very ingenious Mr. West! Is that Mr. Artimus Gordon holding the camera? May I suggest, playing the most appropriate, theme song in your videos Mr. West? You may find it most appropriate Mr. West! Before I take my leave, may I say, great video, very informative, you are most worthy Mr. West, Robert Conrad would be very proud indeed! Good day, gentlemen!

  • @randykeller58
    @randykeller58 3 месяца назад

    I have an LR44 2 batteries to power a digital hygrometer. Put in July 6 2022. D8gital readout and speed still good. May have lost accuracy. Factory reccomended changing after 9 moths. I did not.
    As you can see this exceed 640 hrs.
    So how is this and will voltage affect accuracy of humidity reading?

  • @chukchee
    @chukchee 2 года назад

    What about BR2032 battery? What voltage is bad?

  • @carsinourdna9388
    @carsinourdna9388 4 года назад +2

    Good explanation, keep it up .👍🏼

  • @MrEtorkizuna
    @MrEtorkizuna 2 года назад

    Same consideration for BR batteries.? PRAM batteries in IMACs for instance…

  • @unkmigvel
    @unkmigvel 3 года назад

    Thanks buddy, this was the info I was looking for

  • @ericgeorge5483
    @ericgeorge5483 2 года назад

    This was really useful, thanks so much from England.

  • @AK-qp2pz
    @AK-qp2pz Год назад

    if CR2025 Battery not use for 3years , then voltage will be down ?

  • @spreadcreekjr1731
    @spreadcreekjr1731 4 года назад

    Why was your right hand so gigantic in the intro?

  • @jamesm90
    @jamesm90 2 года назад +16

    No this isn’t good enough, you need a load around 4.7k to test with a volt meter otherwise often the button cell voltage floats up and looks good even though it’s not.

    • @reddog694uk
      @reddog694uk 2 года назад +1

      Well Said Jamesey ! Not Many People Realise That. (U.K Spelling)!

    • @GNX157
      @GNX157 2 года назад +2

      This is my concern too. A small load needs to be applied to see what it can hold against.

    • @storungz
      @storungz Год назад +2

      And i thought there was something wrong with me or my meter! Thank you for mentioning that

  • @Dtruthseek
    @Dtruthseek Месяц назад

    Man, your video really, really helped me. You have a gift. Thank you! 😊

  • @steveskidmore1018
    @steveskidmore1018 2 года назад

    Just what I needed to know. Thank you

  • @ndnman33
    @ndnman33 3 года назад

    Thanks your video was very helpful!

  • @HOLMES-B221
    @HOLMES-B221 3 года назад +2

    I have a Fluke 117 multimeter and had to test about 20 CR2450 3.0V coin cells that were in service for over a year. Most were around 2.99V, but some gave strange readings such as 1.65V that gradually climbed beyond 2.0V the longer I held the test probes in place. Have you ever seen this type of behavior from these types of batteries? Why would I see the voltage climb? Testing a new battery the voltage reads 3.03V as soon as I apply the test probes, and the voltage remains constant, so I know the meter is working properly.

    • @cbaxter6527
      @cbaxter6527 9 месяцев назад

      You were holding the cell. Chemical reaction increases with warm as you observed.

    • @HOLMES-B221
      @HOLMES-B221 9 месяцев назад

      @@cbaxter6527 If you mean my fingers were touching the cell, no. The only thing touching the cell were the probes of the multimeter. Coin cells can be tested laying flat, positive side down, as the outer edge is positive with the negative side up. No need to hold the cell.

  • @CentralCanada
    @CentralCanada 2 года назад

    Coin' Lithium 3V Batt' reads 3.25V !
    This Batt' out of (presumably) well-used vehicle keyless remote 'fob.
    Damaged Batt' ?
    Thanks.

  • @drakestraw
    @drakestraw 3 года назад +3

    How important is amperage? I've noticed that new 1.5v batteries put out about 150mA and are dying below 100. I've used amperage for years because I have a mix of regular and NiMH batteries which are normally only 1.2v and are measured in mAh also. When they hold less than 80% of their rated capacity, it's time to recycle.

    • @drakestraw
      @drakestraw 3 года назад +3

      I had tested my failing CR1632 3V disc before I posted this and it was still just under 3V. When it completely failed I tested the amperage and it was about 30mA. The new one pegged the 150mA limit of my multimeter. The voltage of the new battery was only slightly higher than 3V. So, yes, amperage does matter.

  • @elcompamartinez2647
    @elcompamartinez2647 2 года назад

    THANKS!!! YOU WENT STRAGHT TO THE POINT

  • @bevett1
    @bevett1 5 месяцев назад

    Big help. Thanks for posting.😊

  • @LostCatFinder
    @LostCatFinder 4 года назад

    Is it possible to use a USB device to recharge LR44 batteries?

    • @Pavel3333
      @Pavel3333 3 года назад

      😆🙄😆🙄🙄🙄🙄

  • @colinevans7134
    @colinevans7134 Год назад

    You can make a coin battery charger and check the voltage as well, get a wooden peg,at the end drill 2 small holes and use a small nut and bolt and fix to both sides, get a battery connector and fix the live to one nut and bolt, and the black wire to the other side, put your cell battery between the peg with the nut and bolt and will hold in place now you can test the voltage onto the battery connector and you can charge the battery as well by connecting a low volt battery to the battery connectors and you now have a charger as well

  • @LennWeltmeister
    @LennWeltmeister 2 года назад +2

    Why do all CR2032 batteries I test still give me 3V or superior values?

    • @Henry-sv3wv
      @Henry-sv3wv 2 года назад +1

      cause you should measure the voltage with a current flowing to see if it is good. use maybe a 2.7k ohm resistor for button cells

  • @Vict0rHugo
    @Vict0rHugo 2 года назад

    very good, you helped me. thank you, bro.

  • @mr.agigittygigitty9916
    @mr.agigittygigitty9916 Год назад

    Thanks for the quick answer video 👍

  • @retrodiydotorg223
    @retrodiydotorg223 2 года назад +1

    No testing under load (e.g. with a LED)?

    • @Henry-sv3wv
      @Henry-sv3wv 2 года назад

      or a resistor like 150 ohm - it would be much better, EDIT: NO i guess for button cells a tiny load like 2.7k Ohm is better

  • @crushedz
    @crushedz 2 года назад

    Useful and clear.Thanks!

  • @fabiankhor6831
    @fabiankhor6831 10 месяцев назад

    I test by putting a 5mm LED in series with the cell battery measuring the current in mA. If above 4mA it’s good, if below like 3.x, I replace it. Very easy to hold probe and touch the cell.

  • @saidyassin5498
    @saidyassin5498 Год назад

    Hi, Thank you for the video. I have (3) stored, never used CR2025. All read 3.0 volts but do not work on a remote control for a digital camera. I thought it was the RC-but find out it was the batteries. Any idea why all read 3+ volts but do not work? thanks in advance for you input!

    • @elwrongo
      @elwrongo Год назад +1

      its because of amperage. this video relies on pure voltage which is not enough, amperage does matter so you need to test the battery under load. ruclips.net/video/CZ3PwVtCe1A/видео.html

    • @saidyassin5498
      @saidyassin5498 Год назад

      ​@@elwrongo It crossed my mind. Thanks again for your expertise.

  • @steverose2405
    @steverose2405 3 месяца назад

    Early in the video, you state a coin battery is considered dead at 2.5 Volts and later 2.0 Volts, similarly two different dead voltages stated for a button battery. Please clarify.

  • @majorskies7091
    @majorskies7091 2 года назад

    such a good video thank you i was worried my not too old key tracker (galaxy tag) died but testing the battery it turns out its very dead at 0.12v. I've only had it not too many months but it seems the cell they provided was a cheap chinise ones home brand one made by Henlimax.

  • @RanchHandCowboy
    @RanchHandCowboy 3 года назад

    Very helpful, thank you

  • @edmclaughlin4923
    @edmclaughlin4923 5 лет назад +1

    Welcome Back Matt!

    • @HeilmanHackatronics
      @HeilmanHackatronics  4 года назад

      Thank you, Ed, I plan on making more videos soon. I hope all is good with you.

    • @edmclaughlin4923
      @edmclaughlin4923 3 года назад

      @@HeilmanHackatronics Matt, looking forward to your content.

  • @Smitty998
    @Smitty998 2 года назад

    Very helpful - thanks!!

  • @Draxzion
    @Draxzion Год назад

    I've tried researching where to recycle batteries but there don't seem to be places that recycle Alkaline batteries any more. Some site state that it's okay to just throw in the trash. I wish there was a better way to recycle Alkaline. It must not be cost effective or safe to do so at this time. I just don't have the knowledge of how the battery works, but you would think we could reuse them for something.

  • @RaviSIyerSai
    @RaviSIyerSai 2 года назад

    Very useful. Thanks a ton.

  • @forthefunofit5487
    @forthefunofit5487 2 года назад

    thank you for the information!

  • @canaan_perry
    @canaan_perry 8 месяцев назад

    Thanks -- super useful!

  • @dunnoyolo2238
    @dunnoyolo2238 Год назад +1

    How long can a New CR 1632 last after Expire date ?

  • @webbtz3591
    @webbtz3591 Год назад

    Great info.Thanks.

  • @IcarusTECH
    @IcarusTECH 2 года назад +1

    I've got tons of 2032 batteries that read 2.99-3.01 V on my Fluke 115 and don't work in key fobs :(

    • @Henry-sv3wv
      @Henry-sv3wv 2 года назад

      put a Resistor like R=150 Ohm on it while measuring voltage to see if the voltage drops into the "not good" region..., EDIT: NO i guess for button cells a tiny load like 2.7k Ohm is better

  • @cbaxter6527
    @cbaxter6527 9 месяцев назад

    A volt meter test of a lithium large button cell is virtually indeterminate as a good will read 3.0V and a "dead" will read 3.0V. Your examples are extremes and are obvious cases of determinable battery life. Using a glucometer for diabetes will fail to boot, then after warming cell in ones arm-pit for a period of time (70°F upto 85°F+) will give enough thermal warmth for the chemical reaction to produce more current flow. This technique can give you an extra month to purchase another battery. This quick cheat is ditto for bathroom or kitchen food scales where warmer than ambient room temperature (68-72°F) allows for the device to work. User skiwi33 load test is a good idea and will give you a more accurate cell state. (load of 0.6mA using 4.7KΩ resistor) CR2032 cells are rated around 210mAH capacity with Energizer rated higher by cheating current and cut-off voltage down to 2.0V. Their test indicated a 2.9V, 0.19mA load but resulted in an additional 300+ hour extra life span for 225mAH cell. Their chart indicated upto 200mAH capacity smooth sailing and after a rapid decline that would depend on the device voltage and current usage requirement.

  • @sagarthapa3765
    @sagarthapa3765 4 месяца назад

    2.8 wonderful, but my bike's fob wasn't connecting all too well, hopefully replacing it would work

    • @sagarthapa3765
      @sagarthapa3765 4 месяца назад

      Just saw the voltage discahrge curve, no wonder it was sometimes connecting and sometimes wasn't

  • @misium
    @misium 3 года назад +6

    This is a bad advice. Without a load even an empty battery an show well over 2.5 V.
    Measure with 10kOhm load between terminals. This will show you the real voltage at more nominal current draws (200-300 uA) for a cr2032.

  • @janqs2459
    @janqs2459 Год назад

    The guy in the video doesn't have to much knowledge about electricity. He just touched the easiest way to explain it.
    Seeing 3v or above on the meter doesn't mean that the battery is good. At all. To get it right , you have to do the Amp reading , which for 3V new battery shud read around 8.2 mA

  • @hfjchan
    @hfjchan Год назад

    I hate my heart rate sensor so much. You never know it's the coin battery(even the new one), the sensor itself or the bluetooth dongle is not working.

  • @lund905360
    @lund905360 3 года назад +3

    Wrong way to test needs resistance .

  • @Perplexer1
    @Perplexer1 2 месяца назад

    You can't just measure batteries outside with a voltage test. Even an empty battery can show 3V. The thing that's important is if the battery can hold that voltage when it's being used (is under load)!

  • @santoshrajyelevideosa2z737
    @santoshrajyelevideosa2z737 3 года назад

    Super video's 🎉🎉👍❤️

  • @Bianchi77
    @Bianchi77 Год назад

    Creative video, thanks :)

  • @larzybernard9617
    @larzybernard9617 2 года назад

    Thank you!

  • @brauljo
    @brauljo Год назад

    0:29 The symbol for volts is [uppercase] "V".

  • @zubgarter
    @zubgarter 2 года назад

    Thank you

  • @chaos.corner
    @chaos.corner 3 года назад +2

    Batteries should really be tested under load.

  • @brauljo
    @brauljo Год назад

    0:47 The placement of the less-than sign is confusing.

  • @langert
    @langert 2 года назад +1

    Great instruction but there's one important omission. You didn't state which range to select on the meter and it cannot be read onscreen. But thanks for posting the instructions.

    • @Henry-sv3wv
      @Henry-sv3wv 2 года назад

      his multimeter is auto range. you set the multimeter in the not smaller voltage setting than the battery you measure. so this red one would be set to the next smallest voltage which is greater than 1.5V or 3V which is: 20 Volt DC:
      ruclips.net/video/ts0EVc9vXcs/видео.html
      always measure with a load on the cell or else it can fool you and show good voltage that would break down with current flowing. use a resistor like 150 ohm.
      most likely a much bigger resistor like 2.7k is better for the cell to not drain it too much ...

  • @cartoonworld1733
    @cartoonworld1733 2 года назад

    Thanks sir 😊

  • @balazsio
    @balazsio Год назад

    Thanks !

  • @FknNefFy
    @FknNefFy 3 года назад

    Right but who has that tool just hanging around

  • @smileyzhao2897
    @smileyzhao2897 2 года назад

    hi can u help me do a video review for 2021 new upgraded multi functional volter test ,it is we can offer u a free product tks

  • @Breadmansgarage
    @Breadmansgarage Год назад

    Why doesn't anybody tell you what setting to put your voltmeter on I've watched three videos it's like they just totally expect you to know

  • @Martin-ot7xj
    @Martin-ot7xj 2 года назад

    thankyou , it was Great

  • @pcguru2000
    @pcguru2000 2 года назад +3

    You need to test with a load. Button batteries will always show max voltage even when they should be replaced.

    • @amosfeldman9454
      @amosfeldman9454 2 года назад

      Well, clearly that’s not a true statement. You can see evidence against your claim in this video.

    • @pcguru2000
      @pcguru2000 2 года назад

      @@amosfeldman9454 So just because you see something it must be true. Don't go to magic shows....you might start believing people have superpowers.

    • @davids1681
      @davids1681 Год назад

      @@amosfeldman9454 The voltage-vs-time curve for a Li battery goes way out to the right without dropping much - but of course there's a point where it drops off...so just the fact that the video shows some cells not at "full voltage" doesn't mean that those that haven't dropped still can provide any useful power. Loading during testing is critical.

  • @philipfm
    @philipfm Год назад

    thanks much

  • @adamkempa5157
    @adamkempa5157 Год назад

    Thanks

  • @alex.cristescu
    @alex.cristescu 4 года назад +8

    No load testing of CR cells is kind of useless, you need some kohms load to accurately measure it's state.

    • @mrg466
      @mrg466 4 года назад

      What do you mean , sir?

    • @alex.cristescu
      @alex.cristescu 4 года назад +5

      @@mrg466 you need to put a resistor over the terminals to simulate a load on the battery while measuring. Otherwise the measurement is inaccurate.

    • @mrg466
      @mrg466 4 года назад

      Ok thanks, .

    • @Tupelo777
      @Tupelo777 4 года назад

      Is that what battery tester devices do? Is there a video out there demonstrating this diy load test?

    • @BastiaanNaber
      @BastiaanNaber 4 года назад

      @@Tupelo777 ruclips.net/video/RMQI5R79lx4/видео.html

  • @terrellscaife2411
    @terrellscaife2411 2 года назад

    Cool thanks

  • @dj1relaxmind
    @dj1relaxmind 6 месяцев назад

    This rule is not general available for all coin batteries. China batteries are not good capacity (far less mAh than a genuine good quality coin battery of a top brand) but they still keep the voltage. Recently I bought two used Casio DB360 and one of them had a genuine Renata (not a fake Renata) 2025 coin cell batt at 3.02 volts and still can turn on the LED backlight of the watch and the other watch (same model watch) had a Chao Chuang or a Sun King (a bad quality China brand 2025 coin battery) at 3.06 Volts but no LED light on and barely i can hear a beep from that watch. I replace the cheap China battery with a new battery at 3.32 volts and almost dead watch come back to life, LED light on and the beep sount more louder. Because that bad battery who put me in error after i test it with my multimeter and show 3.06 Volts, a erronate conclude almost convinced that watch is damage.

  • @davids1681
    @davids1681 Год назад +3

    As MANY others have commented, this is a terrible test method. All you're measuring is the NO-LOAD voltage - it's like the first thing a 12-year-old would do with a new DVM. Think back to your last dead car battery...probably all the dash lights worked, the horn, the radio...but when you tried to crank it over (high load), the lights dimmed and anything else that was on went into brownout from the load. You really should take this down because it's just...wrong. Put up another video showing how to REALLY test, including small loads, if you want to be of service vs. providing disinformation.

  • @Ramxenoc
    @Ramxenoc 2 года назад

    All of mine are.438 or less :(

  • @georgiosmichailidis9168
    @georgiosmichailidis9168 2 года назад

    There are people stating that your method is wrong and that you also need a resistor. If that's true, you mislead people. Have a nice day

  • @SA-mr4br
    @SA-mr4br 2 года назад

    I have something pertaining to the 1.21 gigawatts lol

  • @RafaelGriggs
    @RafaelGriggs 6 месяцев назад +158

    I was advised to diversify my portfolio among several assets such as stocks and bonds since this can protect my portfolio for retirement. I'm seeking to invest $200K across markets but don't know where to start.

  • @SpyderRTL
    @SpyderRTL 2 года назад +1

    Without testing with a load, the test is near useless.

  • @CoolKoon
    @CoolKoon Год назад

    This is simply NOT true. Even dead lithium cells will read 3 volts just fine so with the majority of bad coin cells this method is simply not gonna work.