Battery Management Like a Pro Team
Treat batteries as a managed fleet: load-test, label, rotate, and retire them so you always run on a strong pack.
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The fastest robot in the world is useless on a dead battery. Top teams run a battery program, treating batteries as a managed, numbered fleet rather than an anonymous pile. This is one of the highest-return, lowest-cost upgrades a team can make.
Know your battery. The standard FRC battery is a 12V sealed lead-acid pack, 17-18.2Ah, with nut-and-bolt terminals (rule R601). The widely used MK ES17-12 (12V, 18Ah; sold by REV as REV-19-2487 and by AndyMark) is a representative example. Each robot uses exactly one such battery, and a strong one is the difference between a robot that holds voltage and one that browns out.
Measure health, not just voltage. Resting voltage barely moves between a great battery and a tired one; what matters is internal resistance, which is what causes voltage sag under the hundreds of amps a robot pulls. Use a load tester such as the CTRE/AndyMark Battery Beak (am-0995), which mates directly to the SB-50 connector and applies an ~18A load to report state of charge, voltage, and internal resistance, and helps judge overall battery health. Tracking a battery's internal resistance over time is the documented way to decide when to retire it before it fails on the field.
Build the program:
- Number every battery with a permanent label and a logged purchase date. Batteries age out with hard use.
- Load-test on arrival and periodically. Record internal resistance over time; a rising trend predicts retirement before it fails on the field.
- Rotate evenly. Cycle through your batteries so they wear uniformly, rather than hammering one and leaving others idle.
- Charge correctly. Use an FRC-legal charger at the manufacturer-specified rate and keep battery vents unobstructed. Fast/overcharging shortens life.
- Handle with care. Never lift a battery by its wires; doing so can crack internal connections and raise resistance. Any battery that is dropped is marked faulty until re-tested.
- Match-day discipline. Only 'Good' load-tested batteries go on the robot. Keep clearly-separated 'needs charge,' 'tested good,' and 'retired' staging areas in the pit.
Why it wins: eliminations are played late in the day on batteries that have been cycled many times. The team whose worst battery is still strong has a real, measurable advantage in voltage held under load, which translates directly to acceleration, mechanism speed, and brownout immunity when it matters most.
Key takeaways
- Internal resistance (not resting voltage) predicts sag; track it over time on a Battery Beak (am-0995) to decide when to retire a pack.
- Number, log, load-test, rotate, and retire batteries as a fleet; only 'Good' tested packs go on the robot.
- Use an FRC-legal charger at spec, keep vents clear, and never lift a battery by its wires (R601 governs the legal battery).
Go deeper
Lesson quiz
RequiredAnswer all 3 questions correctly to complete this lesson.
1.Which measurement is the most reliable indicator of an FRC battery's long-term health?
2.How does a tool like the CTRE Battery Beak assess a battery so quickly?
3.What is a common best-practice retirement guideline pro teams use for competition batteries?
Answer every question to submit.