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#1
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rechargeable batteries?
anyone recommend a reliable brand of rechargeable batteries, and where
can I buy them? i ordered some high-capacity NiMH C cells online a while back and last night when the power hadn't been restored by the time the sun went down I tried them in my flashlight; dead as a doornail. These had been charged by me after receiving them and then rotated through the charger again; all of my rechargeables have been in the charger within at least the last month. I feel so wasteful using alkalines but I keep having bad experiences with every rechargeable I try. nate |
#2
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rechargeable batteries?
"N8N" wrote in message
... anyone recommend a reliable brand of rechargeable batteries, and where can I buy them? i ordered some high-capacity NiMH C cells online a while back and last night when the power hadn't been restored by the time the sun went down I tried them in my flashlight; dead as a doornail. These had been charged by me after receiving them and then rotated through the charger again; all of my rechargeables have been in the charger within at least the last month. I feel so wasteful using alkalines but I keep having bad experiences with every rechargeable I try. nate Most any name brand will be fine |
#3
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rechargeable batteries?
On Tue, 17 Jun 2008 07:10:58 -0400, "J.H. Holliday" doc@okcorral wrote: "N8N" wrote in message ... anyone recommend a reliable brand of rechargeable batteries, and where can I buy them? i ordered some high-capacity NiMH C cells online a while back and last night when the power hadn't been restored by the time the sun went down I tried them in my flashlight; dead as a doornail. These had been charged by me after receiving them and then rotated through the charger again; all of my rechargeables have been in the charger within at least the last month. I feel so wasteful using alkalines but I keep having bad experiences with every rechargeable I try. nate Most any name brand will be fine Rechargable batteries, as a rule, are very bad for emergency use unless you continually keep them on trickle charge. The problem is they loss their charge just sitting on the shelf and when you go to use them...... well, you found that out. NiMH are particularly bad in this respect. There is a new type of rechargeable on the market now call a hybrid battery. It combines the best of NiMH and alkaline batteries into a nice rechargable battery. Like alkaline, they retain their charge sitting on a shelf, and yet they are NiMH rechargable. Look for the brand Eneloop, made by Sanyo. Its sold at Circuit City and also online. Also, Rayovac makes one, named appropriately enough, Hybrid Battery. There are several others on the market too. -dickm |
#4
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rechargeable batteries?
On Tue, 17 Jun 2008 06:56:12 -0500, dicko
wrote Re rechargeable batteries?: There is a new type of rechargeable on the market now call a hybrid battery. It combines the best of NiMH and alkaline batteries into a nice rechargable battery. Like alkaline, they retain their charge sitting on a shelf, and yet they are NiMH rechargable. Look for the brand Eneloop, made by Sanyo. Its sold at Circuit City and also online. Also, Rayovac makes one, named appropriately enough, Hybrid Battery. There are several others on the market too. I use the Rayovac Hybrid batts and they are very good. About $10/4 at WalMart. |
#5
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rechargeable batteries?
"Caesar Romano" wrote in message ... On Tue, 17 Jun 2008 06:56:12 -0500, dicko wrote Re rechargeable batteries?: There is a new type of rechargeable on the market now call a hybrid battery. It combines the best of NiMH and alkaline batteries into a nice rechargable battery. Like alkaline, they retain their charge sitting on a shelf, and yet they are NiMH rechargable. Look for the brand Eneloop, made by Sanyo. Its sold at Circuit City and also online. Also, Rayovac makes one, named appropriately enough, Hybrid Battery. There are several others on the market too. I use the Rayovac Hybrid batts and they are very good. About $10/4 at WalMart. Don't know about the hybrid, but my experience with Rayovac batteries were consistently all bad. Don't use it on expensive devices, it will all leak and ruin the electronics. Another junk battery is from Task Force. I have good experience with GE, Lemar, Energizer and Panasonic. I had some GE rechargeable for 30 years and those same batteries still hold a charge - fantastic! The rechargeable batteries on my Braun toothbrush is going strong for 10 years, as strong as day one. Wish I knew what batteries Braun uses, like to get some to rebuild the power packs for my cordless drills. |
#6
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rechargeable batteries?
On Jun 17, 7:56*am, dicko wrote:
On Tue, 17 Jun 2008 07:10:58 -0400, "J.H. Holliday" doc@okcorral wrote: "N8N" wrote in message ... anyone recommend a reliable brand of rechargeable batteries, and where can I buy them? *i ordered some high-capacity NiMH C cells online a while back and last night when the power hadn't been restored by the time the sun went down I tried them in my flashlight; dead as a doornail. *These had been charged by me after receiving them and then rotated through the charger again; all of my rechargeables have been in the charger within at least the last month. *I feel so wasteful using alkalines but I keep having bad experiences with every rechargeable I try. nate Most any name brand will be fine Rechargable batteries, as a rule, are very bad for emergency use unless you continually keep them on trickle charge. The problem is they loss their charge just sitting on the shelf and when you go to use them...... well, you found that out. *NiMH are particularly bad in this respect. There is a new type of rechargeable on the market now call a hybrid battery. It combines the best of NiMH and alkaline batteries into a nice rechargable battery. *Like alkaline, they retain their charge sitting on a shelf, and yet they are NiMH rechargable. Look for the brand Eneloop, made by Sanyo. *Its sold at Circuit City and also online. * Also, Rayovac makes one, named appropriately enough, Hybrid Battery. *There are several others on the market too. -dickm- Hmm... sounds interesting but the common thread that I see is that all are only available in AAA and AA sizes. I got the C cell NiMHs so I wouldn't have to carry several batteries with me if I decided to head out for a long ride. I guess that plan won't work? nate |
#7
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rechargeable batteries?
In article
, says... Hmm... sounds interesting but the common thread that I see is that all are only available in AAA and AA sizes. I got the C cell NiMHs so I wouldn't have to carry several batteries with me if I decided to head out for a long ride. I guess that plan won't work? You can get adapters that will allow you to use a AA battery where you need a C or a D. Check http://www.thomas-distributing.com/index.htm for almost any rechargable need. I'll second the recommendation for the Sanyo Eneloops. Great batteries. They ( |
#8
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rechargeable batteries?
"J.H. Holliday" doc@okcorral wrote in
: "N8N" wrote in message ... anyone recommend a reliable brand of rechargeable batteries, and where can I buy them? i ordered some high-capacity NiMH C cells online a while back and last night when the power hadn't been restored by the time the sun went down I tried them in my flashlight; dead as a doornail. These had been charged by me after receiving them and then rotated through the charger again; all of my rechargeables have been in the charger within at least the last month. I feel so wasteful using alkalines but I keep having bad experiences with every rechargeable I try. nate Most any name brand will be fine Both NiCd and NiMH cells have a self-discharge rate that makes them unsuitable for long term storage. Rechargeables are best used for frequent-use applications. alkalines last longer in storage,at least 3 years.(Duracells LEAK,BTW.) If you must use rechargables,for long term storage,get a flashlight that uses Lithium-ion batteries. They will store a charge for 6 months or more. Flashlights that use lithium 123 cells will last in storage for up to 10 years,but the 123 cells are expensive. -- Jim Yanik jyanik at kua.net |
#9
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rechargeable batteries?
On Jun 17, 5:32*am, N8N wrote:
anyone recommend a reliable brand of rechargeable batteries, and where can I buy them? *i ordered some high-capacity NiMH C cells online a while back and last night when the power hadn't been restored by the time the sun went down I tried them in my flashlight; dead as a doornail. *These had been charged by me after receiving them and then rotated through the charger again; all of my rechargeables have been in the charger within at least the last month. *I feel so wasteful using alkalines but I keep having bad experiences with every rechargeable I try. nate What voltage is your charger charging them to |
#10
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rechargeable batteries?
On Jun 17, 6:32*am, N8N wrote:
anyone recommend a reliable brand of rechargeable batteries, and where can I buy them? *i ordered some high-capacity NiMH C cells online a while back and last night when the power hadn't been restored by the time the sun went down I tried them in my flashlight; dead as a doornail. *These had been charged by me after receiving them and then rotated through the charger again; all of my rechargeables have been in the charger within at least the last month. *I feel so wasteful using alkalines but I keep having bad experiences with every rechargeable I try. nate Some thoughts: The NiMH batteries may lose up to 1% of their charge every day. Don't keep charged batteries in flashlight - I use in a camera and they lose charge in the camera. Get a good led flashlight - batteries last far longer. |
#11
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rechargeable batteries?
On Jun 17, 6:32 am, N8N wrote:
anyone recommend a reliable brand of rechargeable batteries, and where can I buy them? i ordered some high-capacity NiMH C cells online a while back and last night when the power hadn't been restored by the time the sun went down I tried them in my flashlight; dead as a doornail. These had been charged by me after receiving them and then rotated through the charger again; all of my rechargeables have been in the charger within at least the last month. I feel so wasteful using alkalines but I keep having bad experiences with every rechargeable I try. nate Check out C.Crane, http://www.ccrane.com/more-categorie...atteries.aspx; their C and D cells stand out for actually having a higher mA-hr rating than their AA's, in contrast to the major brands. I've been using 4 of their D cells in my son's crib toy (Fisher-Price aquarium, lights and motor load) for a couple of years now very happily (once I got over paying FIFTEEN BUCKS FOR A FRIGGIN D-CELL). Note, they take at least 36 hours to fully charge but last at least 8 or 10 weeks in the toy, nightly usage ranging from nothing to maybe an hour. That's with C.Crane's own charger which they've discontinued in favour of a Rayovac model. They're a bunch of radio geeks so they must have decided the Rayovac's a good unit. (I've also used C.Crane's AAAs in a GPS unit and found that each charge gives me about half the runtime of a fresh set of Duracells...a clunk on the head to whoever designs high-drain things around AAAs.) Notwithstanding the well-documented self-discharge of NiMH, if your C- cells were stone cold less than a month out of a charger, I'd say either they had not been well charged or had self-discharge even higher than the norm. I once asked a random local salesdroid why the major brands rated their Cs and Ds no higher in mA-hrs than their AAs and was told that their chargers couldn't handle a higher rating...who knows. Chip C Toronto |
#12
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rechargeable batteries?
As for NiMH cells, about a month is how long they last out of the charger.
NiMH are for items which are charged more frequently. The no name NiMH batteries I've had, not worth the trouble. I went through a couple different Ebay purchases, I use a lot of AA cells. The Ebay batteries would go flat, unpredictably. And one out of several would go bad, which is even more trouble. Finally got some Duracell 2650 AA, and been very pleased with them. Digital camera, and mini mag light. I exchange them nearly every day with the ones in the charger, and mix em up, one goes in the camera, one in the light. So they aren't paired up permanantly. I'd use alkalines in your flash light. Sounds like you don't use it often enough to cycle the batteries through your charger. Instant action, and unpredictable when that will be. That's where alkalines do well. I have two Garrity 3-D flash lights. One in each vehicle. Both on the first set of batteries. I know they are dependable, and will light up mail boxes, etc, while I'm trying to find a house. Not much waste, when I'm on the first set of batteries. -- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org .. "N8N" wrote in message ... anyone recommend a reliable brand of rechargeable batteries, and where can I buy them? i ordered some high-capacity NiMH C cells online a while back and last night when the power hadn't been restored by the time the sun went down I tried them in my flashlight; dead as a doornail. These had been charged by me after receiving them and then rotated through the charger again; all of my rechargeables have been in the charger within at least the last month. I feel so wasteful using alkalines but I keep having bad experiences with every rechargeable I try. nate |
#13
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the Lowe's light
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#14
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the Lowe's light
Frank frankdotlogullo@comcastperiodnet wrote in
: http://www.lowes.com/lowes/lkn?actio...ctId=225285-50 584-FT-NS-2C%203W&lpage=none So???? And...??? |
#15
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the Lowe's light
On Jun 19, 12:03*am, Red Green wrote:
Frank frankdotlogullo@comcastperiodnet wrote m: http://www.lowes.com/lowes/lkn?actio...ctId=225285-50 584-FT-NS-2C%203W&lpage=none So???? And...??? Light that started thread. Three watts and 150 lumens makes an extremely bright LED light. Brighter than any other flashlight I have. LED's most efficient use of electricity and extend battery life. |
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