Charlie99
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The problem is most likely the voltage while loaded, not the unloaded or open circuit voltage. Or to say it a different way, some batteries have too high of internal resistance to work properly in equipment that uses the battery for short high power bursts, even if the overall average power drain is low.I've measured battery voltages before and I think there might be only a slight difference between a new one and the few days old one .. 3.0something verses 3.1
A well designed system would do the battery voltage test while under load. It sounds like the VEO100 does not do this, and therefore gives a falsely optimistic battery charge indicator. You could do a manual test of this sort by measuring the battery voltage while it is loaded with a 100 ohm resistor (about 30mA of current draw). If the "good" vs "bad" battery doesn't show up under that test, then try 50 ohms/60mA loads.
The Pelagic/Oceanic computers that use 1/2AA Lithium batteries also have this sort of problem. In that case, I've found that any battery that the manufacturer has rated for "pulsed duty" will work, while the ones designed only to supply very low levels of current for a long time to realtime computer clocks do not work.
Charlie Allen