Site Search

Power Services Battery Testing

Users Online

We have 3 guests online
Get the Flash Player to see this player.
Power Services Battery Testing
Battery Testing Services PDF Print E-mail

 

Cell Testing

The investment in your stationary battery system is considerable. To safeguard this investment, it is vital that your battery installation be inspected and maintained on a monthly basis. Your monthly preventative maintenance service should not be confused with the inspection required to troubleshoot a specific battery or cell problem.

Severe battery damage can be minimized if minor problems can be identified early and corrective action is taken. Poor routine battery maintenance and operational procedures can lead to extensive irreversible battery damage. Monthly battery maintenance can also identify batteries in poor condition so that corrective service can be performed before the battery or string of batteries fails.

With rare exception, few people within an organization have the skills and test equipment necessary to identify battery problems. If your organization does not have a battery and power specialist, we recommend you contact TT&P to evaluate your battery maintenance program.

TT&P utilizes some of the most sophisticated testing equipment available to evaluate your battery installation. Using either the Alber CellCorder (internal resistance), or the Midtronics Celltron Advanced (conductance) we can look deep inside your batteries to see what is really happening from the inside out. Even the most advanced battery testing equipment is still just a prediction of  how your batteries will deliver under a load, the only way to know exactly what your batteries will give you is to actually load test them with a load bank. 

 

 

 

 

Telecom News

CommunicationsDirect News
  • Foreign Ops Lift Telefnica's Revenue by 9% in Q2
    Telefónica has released its results for the second quarter of 2010, posting quarterly revenue of 15.120 billion euro (US$19.624 billion), up 9% year-on-year (y/y), and operating income before debt and amortisations (OIBDA) of 5.791 billion, up 4% y/y. The reported OIBDA margin was 38.3%, against 40.1% a year earlier. For...
  • Microsoft in Partnership with LG Uplus for Cloud Computing in South Korea
    Microsoft said today that it was partnering LG Uplus to launch cloud computing services in South Korea, Dow Jones reports. The two companies hope to establish a partnership that will help South Korean businesses improve productivity and boost their competitiveness while delivering integrated services across the PC, TV, and...
  • Fujitsu and Toshiba Aim for 25% of Domestic Mobile Phone Market
    Fujitsu and Toshiba are aiming to sell around 7.5 million handsets and grab 25% of the domestic mobile phone market in fiscal 2011 after they merge their mobile phone businesses, the Nikkei Business Daily reports. The two companies now have a combined share of less than 19%. As part of the deal, Toshiba will spin off its...

Power & Energy News

Green Power Network - RSS Feed
  • Global Voluntary Carbon Markets Double in 2008
    The global voluntary market for carbon credits roughly doubled in 2008, according to a report by Ecosystem Marketplace and New Carbon Finance. For the year, 123.4 million metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent (MtCO2e) were transacted valued at $705 million USD, compared with 65 million tons of credits valued at $331 million in 2007. The report estimates U.S.-originating 2008 offset volume at 31.4 MtCO2e.

    The average price for voluntary credits in 2008 was $7.34/tCO2e, an increase of 20% from $6.10 in 2007 and 79% from $4.10 in 2006, according to the report. A carbon credit, also known as an offset, is a tradable commodity representing a unit of carbon dioxide emissions reduction or avoidance. Typically, one credit/offset represents a reduction or avoidance of one metric ton of carbon dioxide or carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e).

    Renewable energy projects were the most common sources of carbon offsets, supplying more than 50% of the total volume of credits transacted in 2008. Landfill gas (methane) capture projects were the second most popular type, responsible for 16% of the market, mostly owing to activity in the United States. More than 96% of offset credits were verified to a third-party standard in 2008. The top four verification standards, responsible for 79% of the over-the-counter market, were: Voluntary Carbon Standard, Gold Standard, Climate Action Reserve, and the American Carbon Registry. Data for the report, Fortifying the Foundation: State of the Voluntary Carbon Markets ...
  • APX Launches Web-Based Renewable Energy Certificate Management Platform
  • ConEdison Solutions Launches Green Power Program for Connecticut Customers

Tower & Wireless News

TMCnet-News
(C) 2009-2010 Telecom Tower & Power Services, LLC - All rights reserved