Clore Automotive PL2320 20-Amp Fully-Automatic Smart Charger, 6V and 12V Battery Charger, Battery Maintainer, and Stable Power Supply with Temperature Compensation

$108.17

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Price: $108.17
(as of Nov 01, 2025 21:28:17 UTC – Details)


Combining fully automatic operation and the ability to properly charge multiple battery types, the Pro-Logix is the charger to meet the needs of today’s and tomorrow’s professional technician. Intelligent, beneficial, safe and versatile – one charger does it all, from fast charging and battery repair to battery maintenance and long term storage charging. Plus, with the ability to properly charge virtually any lead acid battery type, it is the only charger you will need. Flooded, AGM, gel cell, spiral wound, marine and deep cycle batteries all can be charged right with this battery charger.
Charge and Maintain 6 and 12 Volt Batteries
2/10/20 Amp charge rates for added versatility
Fully automatic operation
Advanced multi-phase charging process
Power supply mode provides stable power to maintain system voltage for use in a wide variety of applications

Customers say

Customers find the charger works well, particularly with RV deep cycle batteries, and appreciate its superior quality and ease of use. The device offers multiple settings for customizing charge rates and accommodates various battery types, with one customer noting its active indication of charge completion percentage. While the battery life receives mixed reviews, with some units quitting after three months, customers consider it excellent value for money.

9 reviews for Clore Automotive PL2320 20-Amp Fully-Automatic Smart Charger, 6V and 12V Battery Charger, Battery Maintainer, and Stable Power Supply with Temperature Compensation

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  1. Kelly M. Garvey

    Great foor what it is, lacks 1 feature Id like and another that would help
    OK. Lets get this out of the way: I am an ASE certifed 15 cert master, a trainer, and lead diag tech/foreman of multiple shops for the past 40 years. (4 total, if you are good at what you do, you dont move much).I have owned and used chargers by Associated, Midtronics, Schumacher, Opti, Clore, and the 3 major tool companies (80% of which are subcontracted by one of the above, though some of their chargers have been unique to themselves).Lets start with what this does. Its a “Smart charger”. Meaning it has various methods of checking a battery it is connected to and it self determines if and how to charge it within the parameters selected if the battery doesnt fail testing. Though it claims to have a POWER SUPPLY mode, It is NOT a power supply charger and should not be depended upon as such. If you need something to power your motorhome or maintain a charge while programming, this is not the best choice. (Sure on a ford or a GM it probably would manage, however on european cars there is significantly higher current draw during programming, some exceeding 75 amps! This charger does not make 75 amps! It makes 20 on high speed mode)That isnt a knock, it is simply a statement, dont buy this thinking you can watch TV and cook microwave popcorn while sitting in the trailer with an extension cord. It doesnt do that and may be destroyed if you force it to try.NOW, what it DOES do. It medium speed charges car batteries. I specifically tried it on a battery with a shorted single cell (Dont ask how I know this, or how youd know, call it a bad battery). What this means is this battery will hold a charge, but weakly, it may self drain (The shorted cell drains voltage from the other cells). I have previously been able to charge similar batteries to 10 or 11v using a standard non-smart charger and brute force charging, but they still dont last, they may drain in a day or a week, and they wont supply full current load when needed. This charger refused to start charging the weakened battery. If left in sulfation mode, it eventually charged to 2.5v, and always stopped there and eventually ended with an ERROR display. This is normal and correct for a smart charger, they dont like trying to charge defective tested batteries.Where that can be an annoyance is old lead-acid batteries. They develop sulfation, what amounts to deposits (Think of it like mold on bread) and it prevents them from taking in a charge. This material can be burned off with a high intensity charge and the battery can fully recover, but a smart charge will sense the battery as not taking enough current in the test phase and refuse to engage a charge (like this one did) so you cant really desulfate batteries well with a smart charger unless they are only very lightly sulfated and still taking a relatively high current load.A very few smart chargers have a “Manual mode” that is not smart. It lets you select a timed or constant charge at a voltage you select (Usually 13.5 or 14 or whatever preset number) and the charger puts that amount into the cables for the time selected. This is what we call manual or brute force charge, there is no testing, no safety shutdowns, no idea if the battery is overheating or boiling its cells. Its useful when needed, but for the most part it should only be used when needed. AGM and GEL batteries cannot withstand high amp charges for very long at all. Smart chargers know this (when the proper mode is used!) and will pulse the voltage in and pause at times to allow the battery to cool and prevent damage. This charger seems to do that, as I watched it engage and disengage every few minutes in AGM mode, it was longer and more stable in lead-acid mode.I was trying to decide which charger I would go with, the extremely highly rated Schumacher, or this one (about the same price). I chose this one because of several reviews and a few videos showing the schumacher’s smart mode preventing a 0v battery from charging almost always. This again is normal, if the battery is asleep from long sitting at 0v, or badly sulfated, the smart charger shuts down. Both chargers have desulfate modes, but from the reading this one seemed to work more often down to 3-4v, the shumacher almost universally would not charge a battery that wouldnt stabilize at 5v before charging begins. I charged 2 -DEAD ZERO- volts batteries using this charger. the 3rd (a known defective but barely chargeable battery) did NOT charge and would not begin the process UNTIL I manually charged it for 45 minutes with jumper cables on my idling car. Then it came up to 10v, and the charger attempted charging finally. I let it sit in sulfation mode 3x as a test and NEVER did it command full charging until I manually charged the battery. It would sit in sulfation trickle mode several hours then end charging with error. Even though with some help it would begin charge on the same battery the next day. After charging this battery tested bad both with a conductance tester and with a load tester, but according to load, it was capable of passing a 240cca load (which means capacity of a 480cca battery). The battery was in fact a 650cca unit so it was significantly compromised. I keep it for test purposes.The high rate of 20amps on the Clore charger is what Id call adequate. Its not a speed charger, 30-50 amps are fast, but fast charging comes with its own set of issues, the best way to charge a battery is long and slow. Better for the battery. fast charging heats it, and heat shortens life.Its light weght which may be fine, but doesnt impress me. heavier probably means more metal, more heat sinks, more quality. But its not a featherweight. The Shumacher is heavier.Ive had it a week, so testing is still in progress, but so far, it is a good basic smart charger with fewer features than the competitor (Schumacher) but it seems to do what it claims pretty well.The Shumacher also claims to have a boost mode of higher amps (they use it as their desulfation mode) and a cranking mode of 50amps. 50amps cranking assist isnt much at all. If a battery is SLIGHTLY weak, say 10v charge, where it cranks slow already, that might be adequate. But starters draw 150-300 amps typically. 50a output may come in low and if it does, then the starter will demand whats missing from the battery and the charger, and the excess current draw can be destructive to a charger. Hence why jumper packs state 800-1000cca, they can deliver 200-400 amps at once, and have room to spare.At this point, Its doing what has been asked. No complaints yet, but gonna try another battery on it tomorrow, and also some current probe measurements during charge.

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  2. Viet Tran

    Used for e46 330cic BMW programming. 14.5 volts uninterrupted for hours.
    I used this to maintain 14.5 volts continuous and stable power supply while I spent hours programming and coding the GM5 module, CVM module, AKMB kombi module and it was flawless. Zero fluctuations according to INPA, ISTA+P to program replacement modules and NCS Expert performance was ultra smooth when coding options.Do not use this if you are going to program or code high power parts of the car such as the ekp fuel pump control module or things that require high power motorized actuators such as water pumps or radiator fans etc… those things will need the 120AMP power supply as required by BMW technical advisors.For low powered module programming or coding with no motor actuation, this 20AMP power supply is fine. I tried using the NOCO Genius 10 battery charger/tender and it was too slow to keep up with power fluctuations by ecu requests and I could see the voltage fluctuations in the diagnostics display. But this unit was rock solid for hours…almost a full day of uninterrupted power supply. You can’t beat the price for what most diy folks will need for module flashing.I did not flash any ecu/dme with this since that may be VERY systems intensive and may require the ecu/dme to actuate lots of high power components and this may not be enough for such a situation.

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  3. Dr. G.

    No better way to say excellent product
    Love this charger. I now have 4 of them. As a smart charger it may want to a totally dead battery. That is why I keep dumb charger. It puts out 6 amps and doesn’t care what is hooked up. An hour or less and the smart charger takes over and does an excellent job. Used it on 5AH to 2500AH (Industrial batteries), works great. One problem-does not charge 8v batteries used on some golf carts and older fork lifts. Very highly recommended.

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  4. Dan H.

    One of the best chargers I have used
    One of the best chargers I have used. The ability to select the battery voltage, type, and charging current means that this product is very versatile – and the temperature compensation feature means that the product will not undercharge in the winter and overcharge in the summer.I really wanted to give this product 5 stars, BUT there are some minor things that I don’t like (I wouldn’t call them flaws, so much as I would call them things that I wish were different).1) The voltage/percent charge display selector switch is very close to the on/off switch. With gloves on (or if not paying close attention), it is easy to hit the on/off switch accidentally when trying to hit the voltage/percent charge switch. I made that mistake once (oops.)2) The power cord; while it is a very robust ~14ga, 3-conductor cord, not a ‘low temperature’ design, so it is very inflexible when it is cold outside. They could improve this product by using a low temperature power cord. It would add a bit to the cost, but it would be well worth it.3) The instruction manual is not well written (though I wouldn’t go so far as to say it is poorly written). It simply does not provide enough detail about the function of the charger, so it left me confused when the charger was functioning in a manner that I did not expect. A couple of emails to the manufacturer’s customer service department cleared things up within a couple of days, but if the manual provided more detail things would have been more clear from the start.A couple other notes about this product:- The temperature compensation feature is a very important feature for a car battery charger. This feature certainly works on this charger, though it does not seem to compensate as aggressively as some other brands (like Battery Minder).- In my opinion, this product is much better as a charger than a maintainer. If you’re looking for a great maintainer there are comparably priced units that will do a better job.On the other hand, if you’re looking for a great 20A lead acid battery charger, the PL2320 is better than most this price range – you probably won’t find a better unit under $200.

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  5. Luis M.

    Lo compré porque la marca es de prestigio, lamentablemente aunque le doy un uso ligero, a los 3 años de la compra, dejo de funcionar, el display se quedaba parpadeando y de ahí no pasaba.No lo recomiendo

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  6. Ross

    It is a great little unit, unable to fault. Exactly what we needed for motorcycle reflashes & battery charging

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  7. W Blane

    I bought this in February 2021 as my old charger stopped working. Was sat in the box until a few days ago when I needed to charge the car as it hadn’t been used for a few weeks. Switched it on after connecting it to my battery terminal and went inside the house for a gfew minutes. Luckily I came back out to check it and smoke was pouring out of the side vents. I switched it off and could hear burning noises coming from inside the box for several minutes. I then wnt to see my Amazon order to request a replacement and found there was no option, as apparently this had been shipped from the US. This could be a one off but it could have set light to my car or worse if it was charging in the house. To add insiult to injury I can’t even replace it. Last time I buy electricals from Amazon

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  8. Mark Diakow

    Used in a dealership setting for module programming seems to keep voltage levels up. This is a very durable charger and works fantastic. It’s very convenient that it comes with a place to store the clamps and cord.

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  9. Xjayar

    $$ WARNING $$ – DANGEROUS to Non-USA Customers – 110V ONLY!!! NOT suitable for 220-240V use !!!This is NO reference on the listing or on the packaging that this is NOT 240V! The only clue is very small print on the underside of the charger. There is no 110v/240v selector switch.I have not seen a domestic use electrical item with single voltage input for decades, (UK construction site operations excepted). The Rest-of-the-World supplies items that are dual mains voltage, normally auto-selecting now, occasionally by a two-way slider.AMAZON USA!!! ** You NEED to correct your item listing URGENTLY stating 110v ONLY**

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    Clore Automotive PL2320 20-Amp Fully-Automatic Smart Charger, 6V and 12V Battery Charger, Battery Maintainer, and Stable Power Supply with Temperature Compensation
    Clore Automotive PL2320 20-Amp Fully-Automatic Smart Charger, 6V and 12V Battery Charger, Battery Maintainer, and Stable Power Supply with Temperature Compensation

    $108.17

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