Tool Review: Associated Equipment 6033 125 amp Load Tester

Aug. 7, 2013
Handheld digital tester helps reviewer save time when determining state of customer batteries.

The Associated Equipment 6033 handheld digital 125 amp load tester offers shops a quick and accurate method of testing 12V batteries. It computes the CCA of the battery automatically and the heavy load enables the 6033 to detect bad batteries that can be missed by different computerized testers. The Model 6033 Amp Load Tester is also included with the 6044 Automated Battery/Electrical System Tester from Associated Equipment.

The review

Maverick Mejia, a technician at Car Clinic, an auto repair facility in Mahopac, NY, is the go-to guy for oil changes, state inspections and other quick jobs where the customer typically waits. He was used to testing batteries with a multimeter, but starting the vehicle up and resetting the min/max three times can be time-consuming and require a second technician. When he was given the Associated 6033 handheld digital 125 amp load tester, he was at first skeptical.

"The old way we tested batteries was spot on," says Mejia. "You turn the engine over three times and if the minimum voltage continues to dip, especially below 9V, you have a bad battery. It is fool-proof.

"That being said, I like the Associate load tester. It is the quickest way to figure out whether the battery is good or bad. I use it every oil change."

Mejia grew confident in the tester because when he had the time, he would verify his testing results with other tools. 

"This is a real quick test and it gives an accurate CCA that you can compare to the battery," says Mejia. "It is very frustrating when you deal with an OE battery without a CCA rating with different testers, but if the tool asks you to input CCA you can usually get an idea by what group number battery the vehicle actually takes. However, that takes too much time. With this tool, you don't have to know the exact CCA and you have a fairly good idea if a battery is good or not."

Mejia came up with a roundabout way of deciding whether a battery is bad or not, but he admits "a lot of this depends on the vehicle."

"You know it's a bad battery if the minimum voltage dips below 10V (when applying the load). If the starting voltage is below 10V, watch out. Also, bad batteries tend to be about 65 percent below their original CCA rating. Anything below 350 CCA on most batteries becomes suspect. If they're really bad, they say 'LO.'"

When asked if there was anything that needed improvement, Mejia mentioned that "the clamps are beefy and it makes it hard to test GMs with side terminal batteries."

"I like that it is made in America," Mejia says. "My boss likes that it is a quick way to sell batteries. It does a good job."

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