Post
by X5Sport » Fri Aug 26, 2011 2:58 pm
The jump point +ve is directly wired back to the battery with the same cabling that the starter motor uses. The -ve point is on the chassis and providing there are no bad connections between front and back, the voltage drop will be minimal (a couple of 1/10ths maybe) as your battery -ve terminal is also direct to the chassis. If in doubt, then disconnect the battery -ve which puts it into an 'open circuit' condition and will tell you what the volts are on the battery alone.
These measurements will only tell you what the volts are without the battery being under any stress. I've certainly used those points very successfully in the past.
This might help too...........
These are general voltage ranges for six-cell lead-acid batteries:
Open-circuit (quiescent) at full charge: 12.6 V to 12.8 V (2.10-2.13V per cell)
Open-circuit at full discharge: 11.8 V to 12.0 V
Loaded at full discharge: 10.5 V.
Continuous-preservation (float) charging: 13.4 V for gelled electrolyte; 13.5 V for AGM (absorbed glass mat) and 13.8 V for flooded cells. You may well have an AGM type as they are now pretty common.
Fully charged, engine running: 14.0 - 14.4V typical on the X5.
You do need to take the meter accuracy into account too, hence there may be a variation of +/- a few 1/10ths. There is a clear difference between good and bad though, as a dead cell will show a drop of at least 2V.
After full charge, terminal voltage drops quickly to 13.2 V and then slowly to 12.6 V. - this is why you don't check the voltages less than 4 hours after last charge so that any residual charge on the plates dissipates

Never anthropomorphise computers. They hate that.