Comment by dragontamer

Comment by dragontamer 2 days ago

4 replies

NiMH cells are like $1 each. Seriously, Amazon.com is quoting me $18 for 16 cells, AA Amazon Basics NiMH.

As I said earlier: it's likely a better strategy to buy 4 extra cells and keep them pre charged / topped off, rather than spending a few dollars on a better charger.

D13Fd 2 days ago

I'm not sure that's true in practice. Chargers are often shared in a household and you may not have control over people putting things back on the charger. My preference is to have something that charges more quickly, rather than a bunch of spare batteries.

Plus if you leave batteries on the overcharge-style charger for long periods of time, I'm pretty sure they just dissipate the extra charge as heat, and that charge is applied indefinitely. They essentially turn into little electric space heaters, sending that energy down the drain.

  • dragontamer 2 days ago

    Don't leave them in the charger! You precharge and then store for a year+. Modern NiMHs only need topping off once per year or less.

    So you have two piles. Good charged NiMHs and uncharged depleted NiMHs. While(uncharged.size() >= 2) put them in charger.

    Then once per year, do a refresh charge on all the NiMHs. Easy-peasy.

    • amelius 2 days ago

      So now you have two piles, you come back after a year and then have to figure out which is which. All of this because someone wanted to save a few cents on the implementation of a charger.

      • dragontamer 2 days ago

        The pile with 0 or 1 batteries in it is the one of partially charged batteries.

        The pile with 2 or more batteries is the full set of fresh batteries.

        Alternatively, buy a Battery Daddy and put +side up when it's charged, and -side up when it's uncharged.

        Like the problems you are talking about really aren't that hard to deal with.