I've been considering buying an alkaline battery recharger for the AA and AAA batteries I use and chuck each year.
Does anyone have experience of these and how effective are they?
I'm getting fed up of Ni-Mh batteries only to find they're flat when I go to use them a week or so after charging them up.
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>> I've been considering buying an alkaline battery recharger for the AA and AAA batteries I
>> use and chuck each year.
>> Does anyone have experience of these and how effective are they?
I have no personal experience of them, but they've been around years and still don't seem very common, which leads me to suspect they're not much cop.
>>
>> I'm getting fed up of Ni-Mh batteries only to find they're flat when I go
>> to use them a week or so after charging them up.
>>
Although they're more expensive, and slightly lower capacity, get some hybrid/LSD NIMhs. From personal experience they do hold their charge much longer than normal NIMH,
Sanyo Eneloop is one brand , there are others:-
www.amazon.co.uk/Sanyo-Eneloop-Pack-Batteries-HR-3UTGA/dp/B003QQN6RE/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1299162927&sr=8-3
EDIT: Uniross Hybrio at a similar price:-
www.amazon.co.uk/Uniross-Hybrio-AA-2100mAh-Batteries/dp/B000KG5G5I/ref=sr_1_4?ie=UTF8&qid=1299162991&sr=1-4
Last edited by: spamcan61 on Thu 3 Mar 11 at 14:37
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I still have one bought several years ago but the required rechargeable alcalaines dissapeared from my supplier (Maplin).
Worked well with my Sony radio which detects 1.2V NiMH as being dead.
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>>
>> Worked well with my Sony radio which detects 1.2V NiMH as being dead.
>>
Most digital cameras these days have an option somewhere in the setup menus to choose between alkaline and NiMH to stop this happening.
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Looks like you can still gets rechargeable alkalines on eBay, almost exactly the same prcie a sthe Eneloops, although presumably 1.5V not 1.2V.
tinyurl.com/4kaqos4
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I thought the chargers referred to by the OP were able to recharge any AA cell, regardless of type.
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>> I thought the chargers referred to by the OP were able to recharge any AA
>> cell, regardless of type.
>>
Fair point, I'll shut up about the batteries.
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Except you cant recharge any AA cell regardless of type.
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...Except you cant recharge any AA cell regardless of type...
That's what I always thought, but I've seen one in Lidl which says you can.
Unless I've misread the packaging, but I don't think so.
I'd post a link, but Lidl don't put all the stock on the website.
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Wikipedia says you can recharge some alkalines:-
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recharging_alkaline_batteries
Although charges and batteries have never been common.
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You certainly can recharge primary AA and AAA batteries, 'cos I have done it. I believe they can explode if charged too fast, so I used a constant current source at a few mA, over several days. Certainly worked, but I got fed up with the long charge times and now use Lidl Ni-MH which are fine if the product can work with the lower voltage that these rechargeable batteries have.
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