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| Yep! | 1 | 33.33% | |
| Yup, and they're low self-discharge kind (e.g. eneloop)! | 1 | 33.33% | |
| Nope, disposable here. | 0 | 0.00% | |
| Who needs Ni-Mh when we have these Li-On batteries? | 1 | 33.33% | |
| We're still using Ni-Cd. | 0 | 0.00% | |
| I don't remember Ni-whatever... | 0 | 0.00% | |
| Wait, what? | 1 | 33.33% |
Still remember them Ni-Cd and Ni-Mh batteries?
I still remember the Ni-Mh batteries of old days. Very slooooow chargers, lots of energy loss after a short period of non-usage, and stuff.
We're getting spoiled by modern low self-discharge Ni-Mh batteries it seems. I blame eneloop. They're everywhere! And they behave mostly like Li-On batteries! No memory effect, very fast charging even with 2.5 Ah cells, and usable out of the box and even after long periods of storage! Coupled with a smart quick charger you can get said charging times. I thought I'd never see the day where you can charge two Ni-Mh cells in just slightly over 2 hours. Safely.
I got a bundle of 4 AA eneloop XXs and an international "smart" quick charger off a slight discount at the local electronics dept. store.
What do you think of them? Sometimes I feel like that they're not really long for this world, but it came in very handy when you've still got stuff that accepts AA.
I have quite a few actually. Some of those old 2300 mAh AA and 900 mAh AAA batteries Energizer made. I don't know why I keep them, as they don't really hold a charge anymore. Maybe for nostalgia?
A bit off topic, but I find it funny that a single AA has more capacity than a typical cell phone battery.
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I have quite a few actually. Some of those old 2300 mAh AA and 900 mAh AAA batteries Energizer made. I don't know why I keep them, as they don't really hold a charge anymore. Maybe for nostalgia?
A bit off topic, but I find it funny that a single AA has more capacity than a typical cell phone battery. |
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My cellphone's default battery only has a mAh rating of 1750, compared to the 2300 mAh rating of one AA battery. That was what I was getting at.
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Milliwatt-hours (milliamps × volts × hours) are always the best unit to compare batteries of different voltages. This value tells you how much total juice can be sapped out of the battery and the effective capacity.
How many volts does your phone use? I'm guessing 3.7 volts.
Your cell phone battery: 6,475 mWh
AA battery: 2,600 mWh
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The average alkaline AA is rated about 2,122 milliamp-hours, while the average AAA is rated about 1,150 milliamp-hours. Given a typical drain of 1.225 volts:
AA: 2.122 Ah * 1.225 V = 2.599 Wh AAA: 1.150 Ah * 1.225 V = 1.409 Wh And comparing the watt-hours: 100% * 2.599 Wh / 1.409 Wh - 100% = 84.5% The typical AA battery has 84.5% greater capacity than the typical AAA battery, assuming identical composition. For anyone else interested, the ampere-hour ratings on other common alkaline (at "1.5V", 1.225 true volts) cells: C: 7,800 mAh (9.555 Wh), 554% greater than AAA D: 17,000 mAh (20.825 Wh), 1100% greater than AAA |
1 – Twiggy