

🔋 Stay Powered, Stay Ahead — The Ultimate Battery Guardian for Your Ride!
The Frienda Golf Cart Battery Meter is a versatile, multi-voltage (12V-84V) battery monitor designed for electric vehicles and power systems. Featuring a crisp display that toggles between voltage and battery percentage, it supports multiple battery chemistries including Li-ion and Lead-Acid. Its built-in low battery alarm prevents unexpected power loss, while the durable, easy-to-use design ensures reliable, real-time battery health monitoring across golf carts, e-bikes, scooters, and more.










| ASIN | B093KTM1PS |
| Best Sellers Rank | #6,131 in Automotive ( See Top 100 in Automotive ) #11 in Battery Testers |
| Brand | Frienda |
| Brand Name | Frienda |
| Color | Green |
| Customer Reviews | 4.1 out of 5 stars 2,887 Reviews |
| Item Dimensions | 5.71 x 4.53 x 0.63 inches |
| Item Weight | 20 Grams |
| Item dimensions L x W x H | 5.71 x 4.53 x 0.63 inches |
| Manufacturer | Frienda |
| Measurement Type | Voltmeter |
| Minimum Operating Voltage | 12 Volts (DC) |
| Model | Frienda-Batterie-01 |
| Power Source | Battery Powered |
| Style | Voltage Tester |
| Style Name | Voltage Tester |
| Upper Temperature Rating | 40 Degrees Celsius |
A**E
Cheap, reliable.
Added a voltage gauge on my daughters Razor scooter. Works good! Cheap and decent quality. Just the way I like it!
G**Y
5 stars, because if I leave One you will never see it.
MISLEADING!!! you only get one. None of the functions work. Other than the monitor. BUT!! If I can't program it to the battery I'm using. Not sure if the monitor is correct.
R**H
Does the job but directions suck half of functions seem unusable
Works but can’t get into the advanced setttings instructions are no good not translated to English very well and half of the instructions don’t work,very bright but can’t see it unless looking directly at it
E**N
Read this first! It makes instal easy. Good product!
Echoing another review that made my instal crap-simple! Hopefully this saves you the aggravation I experienced trying to figure it out. DO NOT MAKE YOUR FINAL INSTALLATION/MOUNT UNTIL YOU KNOW IT IS WORKING. 1) Attach the provided (very short) wire harness to DC power supply (battery) using your own wires and connectors to bridge the space from your battery to the harness. 2) Press and hold the Setting button while plugging the harness into the back of the meter. This gets you into programming mode. 3) By pressing the Setting button, select your battery type. Mine is lead acid so I selected "P". 4) Select the number of batteries. In the case of Lead Acid they assume you have 12 volt batteries wired in series. In my golf cart I have six 8-volt batteries for a total of 48 volts. When I first programmed it I entered "6" batteries and as a result it read the voltage correctly but the capacity indicated 0%. I later realized they are assuming 12 volt batteries. So 48 volts divided by 12 volts resulted in 4. I entered 4 batteries and it worked. Enter your equivalent number of 12 volt batteries and then long-press the function key. (Note the lithium battery settings assume your batteries are 3.7 V or 3.2V. Your math will be a little different.) 5) Now set how you want the display to act using the s-1 through s-5 settings. The Settings button toggles through the display options and Function sets each one. The five bars on the display from left to right are each associated with the options S1 to S5. Whether a bar is on or off in the display, indicates that setting is on or off. 6) Unplug the meter from the harness to have it save the settings you input. 7) Plug the meter back in. It should be working. If not, repeat the steps starting at number 2. 8) Only after you have it working, mount it in its permanent location. Good luck!
J**.
Doesn’t work
Doesn’t work. Reads 100% even when the battery is nearly dead.
A**5
Not as accurate as it should be, but does the job I need it to do.
Used this on by Boom BD578Z with a 72V Lifep04 battery. Set the correct parameters on the unit. The percentage is off 8% and voltage is off by 1%. Verified by using a multimeter. I use this to manage my charging. Knowing how far off it is I made adustments to monitoring, and thats what i needed it for, instead of using a volt meter to check everytime I charge to keep the SOC between 80-90 percent.
A**R
Good voltage meter for golf cart
Works well to track voltage
A**L
Setup is complicated - but it seems to work
I appreciate the tips other reviewers have provided. Very helpful. But there is still some confusion - especially regarding step 3 - which is where you set the number of batteries in the series. I put this on a Lithium iron phosphate "12 Volt" battery. It's one "battery" so you'd think the number of batteries would be "01". Not the case. For a Lifepo4 battery that is actually a 12.8 volt unit - there are four 3.2 volt battery cells in the unit. The cells are tied together in series giving you a total of 12.8 volts (3.2 * 4 = 12.8). So - I would select F04 in the settings in my case. Once you figure out the math - it isn't too bad. I'm putting it in a cargo trailer - replacing the lead acid battery that came with it so I can be more confident that the electric jack will always work. I will mount this unit on top of the battery box so I can see the voltage easily. If I run into any issues once it's installed in the trailer - I'll come back and edit this review. But the meter seems to be doing the job now.
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
4 days ago