Today I can confirm my suspicion (conspiracy theory)
, that UNI-T UT658 it can steal 100mAh from capacity total value, if you do disrupt charging when Ampere value this seems to be 0.00A .
In my case I did benchmark 2800mAh battery, if I was not a good observer and by me insisting to leave overnight the phone connected to the charger, I would have 100mAh less.
Older generation of mobile phones these using 650 ~ 800 mAh Lithium cells, at such lower capacity 100 mAh lesser this is an significant number.
Final thoughts ... According to UNI-T specifications, voltage measurement this can introduce 1% Error, additionally and current measurement this can introduce another 1% of Error.
Therefore in capacity measurement combined error this can be as 2%.
Sum of capacity measured after full charge and overnight (balancing period ) this is
2179 mAh, by now calculating Plus/Minus 2% Error real capacity could be :
Lower end= 2.136 mAh
Higher end= 2.222 mAh
And here we have again roughly 95 mAh difference at again roughly 2200 mAh total.
And now I can safely assume that introduced error to 1000mAh cell this would be 50 mAh, and also error at 650 mAh capacity this could be 30 mAh.
Now, in case that under benchmark there is a power bank of 4.400 mAh or 5000 mAh, then you may expect an estimate of 200 mAh (Plus/Minus) as theoretical measuring error.
Product behavior & volts accuracy tests made by ITTSB Blog. Believing it or not .. UNI-T UT658 this is not an Plug&Play meter.
When I did connect UT658 directly to laboratory power supply and compared input voltage with a 50.000 counts multimeter,
UNI-T UT658 this was measuring half volt less when this tested at 3~9V DC.
UNI-T UT658 started measuring correctly DC Volts after this be powered for 10~15 minutes (warm-up period).
I did record input voltage - measured voltage & Milli-ampere which UT658 this required from DC power supply.
Input DCV ....... measured DCV ......... mA
9,005 ....... 9,02 ...... 6.5 mA = DCV - Accuracy Error approximately +0,3%
8,002 ....... 8,02 ...... 6.4 mA
7,003 ....... 7,01 ...... 6.2 mA
6,008 ....... 6,02 ...... 6.0 mA
5,009 ....... 5,01 ...... 5.7 mA = DCV - Accuracy Error approximately +0,3%
4,008 ....... 4.00 ...... 5.5 mA
3,004 ....... 3,00 ...... 4.0 mA = DCV - Accuracy Error approximately -0,3%
Input DCA ....... measured DCA
1,009 A ....... 1.00 A = DCA - Accuracy Error cannot be calculated due limited LCD display resolution
2,006 A ....... 2.03 A = DCA - Accuracy Error approximately +1,5%
According my measurements I can now estimate total of +1.8%
Error in the measurement of mAh (capacity measured) by my
very own UNI-T UT658.
Voltage measurements was taken by BRYMEN BM869 and Current measurements was taken by U1272A HH multimeter.