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#11
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In article , David J
Taylor wrote: 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. Yes, NiCd and NiMH /do/ require different chargers. more accurately, they require different charge profiles. the same charger can do both and should auto-detect the battery type. |
#12
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On Sat, 22 Aug 2009 22:26:17 +0200, "MG" wrote:
200 mAh is a capacity, not a charge rate. I agree with you with on the ignorance been shown. MG Thanks for the correction. Should have just been mA. I'll blame it on the brandy I overdid at the time of previous posting. |
#13
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![]() "David J Taylor" wrote in message om... [] Yes, NiCd and NiMH /do/ require different chargers. David ... or different settings on the same charger, if you have a dual-mode charger. David |
#14
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![]() "nospam" wrote in message ... In article , David J Taylor wrote: 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. Yes, NiCd and NiMH /do/ require different chargers. more accurately, they require different charge profiles. the same charger can do both and should auto-detect the battery type. Yes, that's what I meant. Post updated. David |
#15
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On Sun, 23 Aug 2009 06:27:46 GMT, "David J Taylor"
wrote: "David J Taylor" wrote in message om... [] Yes, NiCd and NiMH /do/ require different chargers. David .. or different settings on the same charger, if you have a dual-mode charger. David True only on newer higher-amperage chargers, not true on older NiCd chargers. If your old NiCd charger only puts out 80-150 mA, the type where you timed how long you left a NiCd cell in the charger (the 12-18 hrs. to charge variety) then you can use the same charger with NiMH cells, leaving them in there as long as you wish, weeks, months even. They might lose a little life expectancy but not so as you'd notice more than any other mild charging abuse of NiMH cells. Granted charging times with the higher capacity of today's NiMH cells will also increase the top-off charging time up to twice as long (25-36 hrs.), but you *can* use your old NiCd chargers with new NiMHs. If that's all you have and don't mind leaving them in the charger indefinitely until you need them, there's no harm in using old chargers with new cells, both kinds of cells. If your old charger puts out 250-300mA (read the current on the device or wall-transformer), you could probably get away with using that too. Just don't leave the NiMH cells in them for many days and weeks. They'll be safe with a constant current that high on them, but it will shorten their life by being kept a little warmer with more possible out-gassing. (Why most batteries die before their time: The liquid component(s) turn to gas when over-heated. If the internal pressure is too high it vents this precious gas to the atmosphere and it can't condense back into liquid inside the battery again when the battery cools. In effect, they cyclically get dried out.) Anecdotal evidence to the contrary (and contrary to all other advice you'll read): A photo-trekking buddy back in 2003 (year important because standard NiMH chemistry was still being tweaked back then) had an old wall-pack type 4-AA NiCd fast-charger that output 400mA per cell. He would leave his NiMH cells in that charger all the time until needed (on the 120v inverter in the motor-home photo-rig or when our rig was plugged into services at a more civilized campgrounds). I kept trying to convince him to use other newer 12v traveling NiMH chargers with auto-shutoff, etc. (like mine were), concerned about him possibly damaging his batteries, or exploding and doing worse damage. But he didn't care and didn't mind. As long as what he was doing worked for him he kept doing it, there was no convincing him otherwise. They were decidedly very very warm whenever I'd check them over the days. Almost too hot to touch. After a day they were not too different than the temperature that mine reach in a 2.5-3 hour charger at the end of the charging cycle. Yet it didn't destroy the batteries as quickly as I thought it would, if indeed it ever did. Over a period of almost a year he was swapping-out batteries a little more often than once a week, always returning the old set to the same charger. I being concerned they'd burst into flames or eventually explode one day. None of the cells being kept with that high of a current on them for many days (for weeks a couple times) seemed to be diminished in capacity during that year. I suspect that (some?) NiMH cells are much more forgiving than we want to believe. I wouldn't recommend using that high of a current on NiMHs indefinitely, but I also wouldn't be overly concerned if I left them in a charger of that type for that long because I had forgot about them. Not after seeing how well his sets of batteries survived that kind of charging abuse. This was even before they improved on the NiMH chemistry used today. You'd probably end up buying a new set just for the hell of it because you saw some on sale before you could ever kill the old ones with a constant 400mA current, according to what I've witnessed. |
#16
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On Sat, 22 Aug 2009 08:11:06 -0500, Factual Corrections
wrote: 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. I'm just about to order another set of Eneloops having been very pleased with my first set. What brand would you recommend I buy instead? Thanks -- AnthonyL |
#17
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MG wrote:
200 mAh is a capacity, not a charge rate. I agree with you with on the ignorance been shown. You should not maintain a trickle charge current of more than C/100 on NiMH batteries, with C being the capacity of the battery. 200 mA is an order of magnitude too great, and will quickly destroy the batterys. 10 mA is suffficient to maintain the batteries at full charge without destroying them. |
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