sechs
Storage? I am Storage!
I think that you mean that some of us have more exotic needs than others....Some of us obviously have more pedestrian needs than others. I appreciate the distinction.
I think that you mean that some of us have more exotic needs than others....Some of us obviously have more pedestrian needs than others. I appreciate the distinction.
In other words, it's a hobby for you. I'm the same way with rechargeables. I probably have way more than I'll ever use, and way more chargers than I need just for the battery-powered devices I have. However, I enjoy playing around with rechargeable cells for its own sake. It all started when my mom's cousin introduced me to NiCds in the early 1970s and hasn't stopped since. Lately though I just use Eneloops as a kind of no-brainer solution to almost all my battery needs. Granted, some cells are higher capacity, but I love the robustness of Eneloops. I know they'll give me 2000 to 2100 mAh both now and 5 years from now. I lot of the higher capacity cells I've tried just crap out after a couple of years.Sorry to be so pedantic. I've spent too many decades designing chargers, and buying and testing a thousand batteries. I became very interested in NiCd cells starting in 1967.
How well does an Eneloop function in a mouse?
Lately though I just use Eneloops as a kind of no-brainer solution to almost all my battery needs. Granted, some cells are higher capacity, but I love the robustness of Eneloops. I know they'll give me 2000 to 2100 mAh both now and 5 years from now. I lot of the higher capacity cells I've tried just crap out after a couple of years.
In other words, it's a hobby for you.
I don't get the whole Lite thing, but I'm sure some marketing genius thinks they can sell 'em.
That makes three of us. All the eneloop AAs I bought cost me $2.50 or less per cell. That's cheap enough in my book. I wouldn't even want the Eneloop Lites unless they cost like a buck each.I don't get it either. :scratch: The AA batteries are cheap enough and last for years. Who wants less capacity? Maybe it would work for a D or C cell with a smaller cell inside.
Are they physically lighter as well? I could be into that for some applications...
The charger I have can charge single batteries, doesn't require 2 or 4 in place for it to work.I'm a little perplexed by your charger. Isn't it the style that requires 2 or even 4 batteries to work?
Yes, that's correct - it's a timed model not a fast charger. It normally takes 5-6 hrs to charge and will trickle charge if batteries are left in. Typically, if I know I need the batteries the day before, I'll put them in the charger to charge overnight, which for me is the normal case.Assuming the quoted output current is correct, it is not a 'fast' charger, but more likely a timed charger. I'd guess it charges for 5 or 6 hours, then switches to trickle charge - is that right? Do you leave the batteries overnight to fully charge them?
Timed chargers were very common before NiMH and are cheaper to produce so they are often bundled with batteries as a kit to keep the price down. That Sanyo you linked to is not one you want.
There are others that will work I presume but I have never heard anything bad about Maja. I personally have the Maja MH-401FS. As a bonus, it is the same price to you as the the Sanyo.
MAHA
Now you can accessorize so many outfits.
I can only presume you bought more than one set than since most devices don't use just 1 battery.The Glitter cells work great as I don't need glasses to easily identify which cells go together in a set.