When we built this house 20 years ago, we had the builder install a special "electronics" circuit fed by a large UPS to power computers and other electronic devices that we wanted to have reliable power. That UPS uses a series connected set of 4 deep discharge 12V batteries. Being frugal, I replace batteries when they fail rather than replacing the entire set.
Several times a battery failed with a shorted cell. Since that reduced the voltage of the entire stack, the UPS wound up overcharging the batteries. On two occasions that resulted in a catastrophic failure of one of the batteries.
That battery bank is now part of our backup solar system, and is cycled daily. To hopefully prevent another catastrophic failure and to give an early warning that something is amiss, I designed a battery match monitor. It sounds a periodic alarm whenever there is a mismatch of more than .5V between the batteries. An even more urgent alarm is sounded if any of the batteries go into a deep discharge or overcharge condition.
Some of you may also have solar systems, and I wonder if there would be any interest in this device. I could supply it as a kit or assembled PCB that would fit into a small Polycase. It works with 24V, 36V, and 48V systems. Auto-calibration is done at first power-up with a 13.00V power source on all channels.
Jeff