โFeb-16-2014 02:58 PM
โFeb-16-2014 11:34 PM
BillyW wrote:LittleBill wrote:
one word. eneloop. best rechargeable ever. 3 years 85% capacity. enough said.
pair it with a lacrosse charger, can do individual batterys full discharge and recharge.
i have close to 50+. best thing invented ever
The Eneloop batteries and the Lacrosse charger are exactly what I was looking at. Good to hear I was on the right track.
For those of you that complained about the batteries not holding a charge in storage for very long, that was my experience too. These new batteries appear to be much better. One of my main concerns is forgetting they're in the charger and they end up ruined. This Lacrosse charger appears to prevent that too.
โFeb-16-2014 06:49 PM
LittleBill wrote:
one word. eneloop. best rechargeable ever. 3 years 85% capacity. enough said.
pair it with a lacrosse charger, can do individual batterys full discharge and recharge.
i have close to 50+. best thing invented ever
โFeb-16-2014 06:29 PM
LittleBill wrote:
one word. eneloop. best rechargeable ever. 3 years 85% capacity. enough said.
pair it with a lacrosse charger, can do individual batterys full discharge and recharge.
i have close to 50+. best thing invented ever
โFeb-16-2014 06:19 PM
All58Parks wrote:Alfred622 wrote:
My comment here may be unpopular - I used rechargables for a while but, since I didn't keep them on a charger all the time, they were frequently mostly discharged when I needed them. Then I'd need to charge 'em up. So now I buy a bulk box of AA or AAA quality alkaline cells. They will last much longer in storage than will the rechargables. So now everything works and if it doesn't, I just put in fresh alkalines.
Now I use batteries in low current situations - like LED flashlights and walkie talkies. If I had anything that had high current draw, like a helicopter, then for sure I'd use rechargables.
My experience was the same. I bought a bunch of them, but the performance was poor and I ended up going back to buying high-quality alkalines that perform better and have a much better shelf life.
โFeb-16-2014 06:13 PM
Alfred622 wrote:
My comment here may be unpopular - I used rechargables for a while but, since I didn't keep them on a charger all the time, they were frequently mostly discharged when I needed them. Then I'd need to charge 'em up. So now I buy a bulk box of AA or AAA quality alkaline cells. They will last much longer in storage than will the rechargables. So now everything works and if it doesn't, I just put in fresh alkalines.
Now I use batteries in low current situations - like LED flashlights and walkie talkies. If I had anything that had high current draw, like a helicopter, then for sure I'd use rechargables.
โFeb-16-2014 06:09 PM
โFeb-16-2014 05:54 PM
โFeb-16-2014 05:27 PM
โFeb-16-2014 04:56 PM
โFeb-16-2014 04:19 PM
โFeb-16-2014 03:18 PM