Sorry for this question which might be dumb. Why would I choose these rechargeable batteries over one-time use Duracells? Usage is typical wall clock/remotes/oxymeter etc. Do these hold charges for longer period or something?
Reusable, will be cheaper in the long run vs Duracell. For my wireless mouse, I have not observed any major difference in run time vs Duracell.Sorry for this question which might be dumb. Why would I choose these rechargeable batteries over one-time use Duracells? Usage is typical wall clock/remotes/oxymeter etc. Do these hold charges for longer period or something?
Depends on what do you want to use it for. The devices you mentioned like clocks,remotes, oxymeters are very low power consumption devices. So having rechargeable batteries may not make any sense for them.Sorry for this question which might be dumb. Why would I choose these rechargeable batteries over one-time use Duracells? Usage is typical wall clock/remotes/oxymeter etc. Do these hold charges for longer period or something?
The devices you mentioned don't need rechargeable battery. You can simply replace them cheaply. Eveready will also do.Sorry for this question which might be dumb. Why would I choose these rechargeable batteries over one-time use Duracells? Usage is typical wall clock/remotes/oxymeter etc. Do these hold charges for longer period or something?
Don't use alkaline batteries like Duracell in a wall clock. Use Zinc batteries like Everready or similar and yes get ready to replace every 6 months or soWhy would I choose these rechargeable batteries over one-time use Duracells? Usage is typical wall clock/remotes/oxymeter etc.
Duracell does better when power requirements are higher. If your application has such a need then a rechargeable will be suitable over a Duracell.Do these hold charges for longer period or something?
You would need a recharger or do you have one already. NimH can't deliver high power like lithium can. That too comes with caveats depending how big of a battery it can holdWhile we are on the topic of battery, is there any good high lumen torch which can utilise it? Rechargeable battery in them would be so good.
Says it's 1,000 lumen which I do not believe. Doubt it can deliver even half that.I want something like this torch here. My friend has it and the brightness is really good even though the battery lasts only a few hours at full brightness.
Says 2,000 lumen which is not possible.Also I'm not sure if it's the same but there's also one Shadowhawk model which I really like but price is out of budget (costs ₹2k)
I'm using eneloops for almost everything but hold on there's a catch. They drain faster if used in clocks and specific tv remotes due to voltage mismatch. I'm also using everready rc batteries for torches, weighing machines etc.Usage is typical wall clock/remotes/oxymeter etc. Do these hold charges for longer period or something?
But many ppl often got those AA/AAA 10 cell pack for 49/99 rupees in flash deals which for a typical person is more than enough to last a year or two.I'm using eneloops for almost everything but hold on there's a catch. They drain faster if used in clocks and specific tv remotes due to voltage mismatch. I'm also using everready rc batteries for torches, weighing machines etc.
Using rc batteries might sound costly compared over conventional batteries but it always very convenient and saves when such batteries die and one has to go out buy them etc. esp. when elderly people are at home and they dont have to go out, hunt in every house drawers but simply charge them just like a phone and enjoy stuff almost uninterrupted!
A simple 2-3hrs charge saves a lot.
I honestly don't know about the lumen ratings man. But the first ₹500 one was decent enough for my use. Only wish the range was longer and it has three levels of brightness. The battery also doesn't last long.You would need a recharger or do you have one already. NimH can't deliver high power like lithium can. That too comes with caveats depending how big of a battery it can hold
Says it's 1,000 lumen which I do not believe. Doubt it can deliver even half that.
If you think this is high lumen I wonder whether you ever compared with a product that can really deliver that.
Says 2,000 lumen which is not possible.
depends on the charger you are using , for me the ikea charger that i use charges in about 6 hours for the 2500 mah batteries. you could say its slow but it has some kind of slow charging towards the end of the charging process to prolong the life of the batteries.As many have purchased or using these Eneloops , whats the charging time for these ?