how to measure battery capacity
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People often ask how do you measure battery capacity and what the numbers actually mean. So here’s a clear explanation you can follow whether you’re checking a car battery, UPS battery, power bank, or any rechargeable battery.
🧐 What “capacity” actually means
Battery capacity tells you how much energy the battery can store.
Usually written as:
- mAh (for small batteries, phones, power banks)
- Ah (for larger batteries, UPS, solar, car)
Example:
- 2000 mAh = 2 Ah
- 100 Ah battery can theoretically deliver 1 amp for 100 hours, or 10 amps for 10 hours.
MAH to AH convert
3 main ways to measure battery capacity1. Use a battery tester / analyzer
Some testers actually discharge the battery and measure the real usable capacity.
This is the most accurate method.
2. Measure discharge time
If you know the discharge current, you can calculate capacity:
Capacity (Ah) = Current (A) × Time (hours)
Example:
- battery discharges at 5A for 10 hours →
5 × 10 = 50Ah
This is how labs and engineers do it.
3. Use smart chargers
Some smart chargers show:
- charged capacity
- discharged capacity
- percentage left
Not perfect, but better than guessing.
Important: voltage ≠ capacityA full battery and a weak battery can both show similar voltage.
Voltage alone does not tell you how much energy is left.
State of charge ≠ actual capacitySometimes a battery shows “100%” but the real capacity is lower because the battery has aged.
Example:
A 100Ah battery may only provide 60Ah after years of use.
🧪 If the battery is old…
Actual capacity goes down with:
- age
- heat
- deep discharges
- number of cycles
So measuring is the only real way to know.
For solar or UPS systemsLook for:
- Ah
- cycle life
- discharge curves
Many companies list nominal capacity, not usable capacity, so real performance might be lower.
🧠 Quick summary
To measure capacity, you basically:
- discharge the battery
- track time and current
- calculate capacity using Ah = A × hours
If the number is much lower than the rated capacity, the battery has aged or is damaged.
Final thoughtsMeasuring battery capacity is mostly about controlled discharge. Voltage alone can’t tell you the real number. If you want an exact reading, use a proper tester or a measurement method rather than relying on what the label says.
Hope this helps someone searching the same question!