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#1
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JEP wrote:
I very rarely use my digital camera, so most of the time it sits in a [...] The camera is a 6 year old point-and-shoot Nikon Coolpix 2100 (2 megapixel) that uses AA batteries. I have been using rechargable Energizer NiMH batteries, 2500 mAh. My problem is that the batteries are almost always dead whenever I need my camera; Yes, normal rechargable batteries have a high self-discharge rate, even when not used. And they age. After 6 years I would expect the battery to hold only a fraction of what it used to hold when new. Plus the deep discharge every time is not a life-enhancing scenario, either. They seem to be drain within a week or so. New rechargable batteries should last significantly longer, typical NiMH should loose about 1/3 per month. I bought rechargable NiMH batteries because I was told digital cameras would deplete other batteries too quickly. Well,almost true. Using batteries instead of rechargables will deplete your wallet if you have a standard usage pattern for your camera. You don't. Given my usage patterns, should I be using a different type of battery? Most definitely yes. I want something that will hold its charge (for the long periods when the camera is not being used) Use normal AA batteries (non-rechargable). For your usage pattern that's the best option. Not to mention that you can just try it without buying any new stuff. Or try the new Sanyo Eneelops with low self-discharge rate. However they are expensive and require a new charger, too. but will have enough juice to get me through a week or two of vacation when I do use the camera. That's not going to happen. If you _actively_use_ the camera daily then no batterie will hold enough charge to last that long. jue |
#2
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On Sat, 22 Aug 2009 05:40:35 -0700, Jürgen Exner
wrote: Use normal AA batteries (non-rechargable). For your usage pattern that's the best option. Not to mention that you can just try it without buying any new stuff. Or try the new Sanyo Eneelops with low self-discharge rate. However they are expensive and require a new charger, too. The new low-discharge "pre-charged" NiMH batteries do not require a new charger. And if you don't buy the Eneloop brand of these types of batteries then they are no more expensive than normal prices you've paid for NiMH batteries in the past. The only reason Eneloops are higher priced is because that's the only brand-name that online parroting trolls, who don't actually buy batteries for their imaginary cameras, know of to spew constantly. Since everyone thinks that Eneloops are the only brand or somehow better, then Sanyo gets to rob everyone blind. Such is the folly of following online troll's advice. Eneloops may have been the first kids on the block but that's not been true for almost 2 years now. Nor are Eneloops the best anymore. Though you'll never know this by listening to online trolls' parroted advice. You are also wrong about advising them to use normal alkaline AA batteries. Digital cameras require high-current rates, but for very short durations. Regular alkalines will only be useful for a very short period of their typical life-time in all other devices before their voltage drops below a useful level for digital cameras. A *huge* waste of money for a digital camera. NiMHs or Lithiums (if your battery can deal with the slightly higher voltages of Lithium AAs) are best for all digital cameras. Please stop spouting advice on a topic that you obviously know nothing about. |
#3
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Factual Corrections wrote:
On Sat, 22 Aug 2009 05:40:35 -0700, Jürgen Exner wrote: Use normal AA batteries (non-rechargable). For your usage pattern that's the best option. Not to mention that you can just try it without buying any new stuff. Or try the new Sanyo Eneelops with low self-discharge rate. However they are expensive and require a new charger, too. [ranting snipped] Oh, I see you found a new field for your rantings because nobody was listening to your P&S versus dSLR nonsense any longer. jue |
#4
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On Sat, 22 Aug 2009 06:24:51 -0700, Jürgen Exner
wrote: Factual Corrections wrote: On Sat, 22 Aug 2009 05:40:35 -0700, Jürgen Exner wrote: Use normal AA batteries (non-rechargable). For your usage pattern that's the best option. Not to mention that you can just try it without buying any new stuff. Or try the new Sanyo Eneelops with low self-discharge rate. However they are expensive and require a new charger, too. [ranting snipped] Oh, I see you found a new field for your rantings because nobody was listening to your P&S versus dSLR nonsense any longer. jue Is that the only kind of red-herring reply you can come up with when anyone has easily proved you 100% wrong? Is this the only way you can refute being exposed as an ignorant troll who is spouting major misinformation (a good moniker for you, Major MissInformation) because you clearly know nothing about cameras and the batteries they use? Which now shows everyone how much credibility you'll ever have about any cameras at all. No need to reply. You had your chance. It didn't work. In fact your reply made you look even worse. No doubt another reply from you will do the same for you, only worse yet. I know, try highlighting typos or grammar errors for your next reply. Then you'll be clearly displaying both of the most important and obvious troll-feathers in your cap. Go crawl back under your rock. Your exposure to some light is starting to peel your scales away. |
#5
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"Jürgen Exner" wrote in message
[] Or try the new Sanyo Eneelops with low self-discharge rate. However they are expensive and require a new charger, too. [] jue Do you have a reference for "requiring a new charger"? I've been using my standard "1-hour" NiMH charger for the last several months with no problem. David |
#6
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On Sat, 22 Aug 2009 14:25:39 GMT, David J Taylor wrote:
Or try the new Sanyo Eneelops with low self-discharge rate. However they are expensive and require a new charger, too. Do you have a reference for "requiring a new charger"? I've been using my standard "1-hour" NiMH charger for the last several months with no problem. You're correct, the Eneloops do *not* require a new charger. When they were introduced (first the Eneloops, followed several months later by RayOVac's Hybrids), and before Sanyo started packaging chargers with some of their Eneloops, the packages said that any standard NiMH charger could be used. In fact some of Eneloops chargers are sub-optimal. They're all very slow, but some of them also lack individual charging circuits,only charging cells in pairs. |
#7
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"David J Taylor"
wrote: "Jürgen Exner" wrote in message [] Or try the new Sanyo Eneelops with low self-discharge rate. However they are expensive and require a new charger, too. Do you have a reference for "requiring a new charger"? I've been using my standard "1-hour" NiMH charger for the last several months with no problem. Hmmm, good to know. I didn't have a NiMH charger and was certain that I couldn't use my old NiCd-charger, so I had to get a new one with the Eneloops. jue |
#8
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![]() "Jürgen Exner" wrote in message ... "David J Taylor" wrote: "Jürgen Exner" wrote in message [] Or try the new Sanyo Eneelops with low self-discharge rate. However they are expensive and require a new charger, too. Do you have a reference for "requiring a new charger"? I've been using my standard "1-hour" NiMH charger for the last several months with no problem. Hmmm, good to know. I didn't have a NiMH charger and was certain that I couldn't use my old NiCd-charger, so I had to get a new one with the Eneloops. jue Yes, NiCd and NiMH /do/ require different chargers. David |
#9
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On Sat, 22 Aug 2009 17:31:19 GMT, "David J Taylor"
wrote: "Jürgen Exner" wrote in message .. . "David J Taylor" wrote: "Jürgen Exner" wrote in message [] Or try the new Sanyo Eneelops with low self-discharge rate. However they are expensive and require a new charger, too. Do you have a reference for "requiring a new charger"? I've been using my standard "1-hour" NiMH charger for the last several months with no problem. Hmmm, good to know. I didn't have a NiMH charger and was certain that I couldn't use my old NiCd-charger, so I had to get a new one with the Eneloops. jue Yes, NiCd and NiMH /do/ require different chargers. David No, it all depends on their mAh output. If the NiCd is charging at a 200 mAh rate or less, then there's no need to get a new charger if all you have is an ancient NiCd charger. Yes, it will take longer than the amperage that more modern NiMH chargers put out and charge the batteries more quickly, but a constant 200 mAh charge on NiMH batteries will not harm them. Many NiMH chargers keep a sustained 150mAh charge on batteries after their initial full charge to circumvent their internal draining resistance (self-discharge rate). I'm amazed at the amount of ignorance being displayed by self-appointed "pros" in this newsgroup. |
#10
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![]() "Factual Corrections" wrote in message ... On Sat, 22 Aug 2009 17:31:19 GMT, "David J Taylor" wrote: "Jürgen Exner" wrote in message . .. "David J Taylor" wrote: "Jürgen Exner" wrote in message [] Or try the new Sanyo Eneelops with low self-discharge rate. However they are expensive and require a new charger, too. Do you have a reference for "requiring a new charger"? I've been using my standard "1-hour" NiMH charger for the last several months with no problem. Hmmm, good to know. I didn't have a NiMH charger and was certain that I couldn't use my old NiCd-charger, so I had to get a new one with the Eneloops. jue Yes, NiCd and NiMH /do/ require different chargers. David No, it all depends on their mAh output. If the NiCd is charging at a 200 mAh rate or less, then there's no need to get a new charger if all you have is an ancient NiCd charger. Yes, it will take longer than the amperage that more modern NiMH chargers put out and charge the batteries more quickly, but a constant 200 mAh charge on NiMH batteries will not harm them. Many NiMH chargers keep a sustained 150mAh charge on batteries after their initial full charge to circumvent their internal draining resistance (self-discharge rate). I'm amazed at the amount of ignorance being displayed by self-appointed "pros" in this newsgroup. 200 mAh is a capacity, not a charge rate. I agree with you with on the ignorance been shown. MG |
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