Batteries question

I

Ioannis Vranos

Guest
Hi fellows, one somehow unusual question.


I was using some AAA 1.5V batteries for usual stuff (remote controls
etc) and recently decided to move to rechargeable batteries.

So I purchased 4x AAA Sanyo HR-4U batteries which turned to be of 1.2V.
I have not much micro-electronic background so I wonder, does this make
any difference?

Are there any 1.5V rechargeable AAAs or is this the usual for such
rechargeables?



--
Ioannis Vranos

http://www23.brinkster.com/noicys
 
By standard, the NiCad battery type nominal voltage is 1.25 V. This has
to do with the chemistry of the battery. There are some expensive
industrial type chargeable batteries that are 1.5 V. These are not made
the same way as the reasonable cost consumer batteries.

When shopping around, take care that many dealers will call the standard
1.25 V batteries a 1.5 V battery type, because people generally use them
as 1.5 V batteries. If you have a consumer device that was made to use
rechargeable batteries, it would be designed to use the standard 1.25 V
rechargeable battery.

For a remote control, since the batteries last many months, why would
you go to rechargeable batteries? The rechargeable battery will loose
its charge more quickly than a standard alkaline battery. You will find
that after a month or two, you may have to recharge the batteries.

When on the shelf, rechargeable batteries will loose their first 10% of
charge within the first 24 hours. After that they will self discharge at
a rate of about 5% for the next 24 hours. After about 24 to 48 hours,
the rate of loss would be about 1% per day. If you were to charge a
NiCad battery and put it on the shelf, you would have to re-charge the
battery before use, if you let it sit for about a week, and want to have
optimum performance.

--

Jerry G.
======

"Ioannis Vranos" <ivr@guesswh.at.grad.com> wrote in message
news:cjgpkb$dd4$1@ulysses.noc.ntua.gr...
Hi fellows, one somehow unusual question.


I was using some AAA 1.5V batteries for usual stuff (remote controls
etc) and recently decided to move to rechargeable batteries.

So I purchased 4x AAA Sanyo HR-4U batteries which turned to be of 1.2V.
I have not much micro-electronic background so I wonder, does this make
any difference?

Are there any 1.5V rechargeable AAAs or is this the usual for such
rechargeables?



--
Ioannis Vranos

http://www23.brinkster.com/noicys
 
Jerry G. wrote:
By standard, the NiCad battery type nominal voltage is 1.25 V.

Actually the specific ones are Ni-MH 800 mAh.

SANYO Ni-MH 800, Model HR-4U 1.2V AAA



This has
to do with the chemistry of the battery. There are some expensive
industrial type chargeable batteries that are 1.5 V. These are not made
the same way as the reasonable cost consumer batteries.

When shopping around, take care that many dealers will call the standard
1.25 V batteries a 1.5 V battery type, because people generally use them
as 1.5 V batteries. If you have a consumer device that was made to use
rechargeable batteries, it would be designed to use the standard 1.25 V
rechargeable battery.

For a remote control, since the batteries last many months, why would
you go to rechargeable batteries? The rechargeable battery will loose
its charge more quickly than a standard alkaline battery. You will find
that after a month or two, you may have to recharge the batteries.

Actually the main target is my MP3 player/Radio which finishes 1 AAA
1.5V in about 12 hours. :)



When on the shelf, rechargeable batteries will loose their first 10% of
charge within the first 24 hours. After that they will self discharge at
a rate of about 5% for the next 24 hours. After about 24 to 48 hours,
the rate of loss would be about 1% per day. If you were to charge a
NiCad battery and put it on the shelf, you would have to re-charge the
battery before use, if you let it sit for about a week, and want to have
optimum performance.

Thanks for the information. So all standard consumer AAA rechargeable
batteries around are of 1.2V?

My MP3 player has a battery indicator which indicated the newly charged
one as half-full. I suppose it measures voltage, so I do not care so
much about it.

By the way, what is the usual capacity of normal non-rechargeable
alkaline AAA batteries out there?



--
Ioannis Vranos

http://www23.brinkster.com/noicys
 
Ioannis Vranos <ivr@guesswh.at.grad.com> wrote:
Rayovac makes a rechargable alkaline that is the usual 1.5V. There may
be others. I've used these for years in my consumer electronics and
they are pretty good. Like lead-acid batteries though if you deep
discharge them, they die. They like to be re-charged often and seem to
have about the capacity of regular alkalines, perhaps a little less. I
got about 50 charges to a set before they started to degrade, which is
the cost of over 30 sets of batteries, so I think I got my money's worth
from them.

DLC

: Ioannis Vranos wrote:

: > My MP3 player has a battery indicator which indicated the newly charged
: > one as half-full. I suppose it measures voltage, so I do not care so
: > much about it.


: But unfortunately it just gave me a low battery indication and stopped
: playing after 2-3 hours of operation only...


: Are there rechargeable batteries suitable for this kind of stuff?



: --
: Ioannis Vranos

: http://www23.brinkster.com/noicys

--
============================================================================
* Dennis Clark dlc@frii.com www.techtoystoday.com *
* "Programming and Customizing the OOPic Microcontroller" Mcgraw-Hill 2003 *
============================================================================
 
Ioannis Vranos <ivr@guesswh.at.grad.com> wrote in message news:<1096553769.11407@athnrd02>...

By the way, what is the usual capacity of normal non-rechargeable
alkaline AAA batteries out there?
According to this FAQ site, NiMh will last longer than alkalines
in high power equipment. The capacity of an alkaline is maybe
twice that of the NiMh, but the alkaline must be discharged
much slower than the rechargeable in order to obtain more total
energy. So, fo a low power device like a transistor radio,
alkalines should last longer, but for higher power devices like
digital cameras and flashlights, you are probably better off
with the NiMh. But the shelf life of alkalines is much longer
than NiMh since the rechargeable battery will self discharge
just sitting on the shelf for a few months. So, for a
flashlight that is seldom used, alkalines should be better.

http://www.greenbatteries.com/documents/Battery_FAQ.htm#alkaline%20run%20down%20fast

-Bill
 

Welcome to EDABoard.com

Sponsor

Back
Top