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nickcw | 1 month ago
They have very low self discharge so you can keep them on the shelf for a year and they will still have 70% charge which is very different to most rechargeable batteries.
They don't leak unlike alkaline batteries and you can run them to 0% charge without damaging them unlike Lion batteries.
The terminal voltage is only 1.2v so there is the occasional thing they don't work well in.
That said my collection of eneloops get much less use than they used to as everything comes with built in lithium batteries and a usb charger nowadays. That is very convenient until the moment the lithium battery dies...
Changing the lithium battery in things sucks. Firstly it's really difficult to get a good one and not a crappy knock off. Secondly modern stuff isn't meant to be repaired. Every time I pick up my kindle I shed a small tear when I see the screen damage I caused changing the battery.
So, I buy stuff with AA or AAA batteries if possible and if I want it to last for more than 3 years.
NoImmatureAdHom|1 month ago
Don't shed a tear! https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kintsugi
Repairs are beautiful.
jasona123|1 month ago
theshrike79|28 days ago
Someone tested them and they're practically identical in performance to actual Eneloops, just a lot cheaper.
BeetleB|1 month ago
And they are overhyped.
Most of them are about 2000 mAh. Other NiMH batteries can have, say, 2700 mAh. So even though the latter have a higher discharge rate - after 6 months of storage the latter still has more juice.
The benefit with the 2700 mAh, of course, is if you're using when full, you can use it for much longer.
If they cost the same, I could see the hype. But most people are still better off with regular NiMH AA batteries.
jdietrich|1 month ago
I can't think of any good applications for conventional NiMH cells any more - they're dominated by LSD NiMH cells in low-discharge applications, by lithium primary cells in ultra-low-discharge applications and by the various lithium secondary chemistries in high-discharge applications.
russdill|1 month ago
kalleboo|1 month ago
Any new "Made in Japan" NiMH cell is an Eneloop since that's the only NiMH factory left in Japan. E.g. IKEA's LADDA are still Eneloop.