Up to the individual I guess but I’ll give you one reason why I wouldn’t use rechargeable batteries in a device that wasn’t designed to use them. Firstly rechargeable batteries have a lower voltage than do Alkaline batteries so their’s no guarantee that the appliance fitted with rechargeable batteries instead of Alkaline batteries will perform at its peak. Also the battery gage or status reading may be wrong which could cause some extra problems. Appliances that take rechargeable batteries are designed to take all these considerations into account, the Zoom H6 for example. Whilst the Zoom H6 won’t recharge rechargeable batteries it can be set to accept them so that performance is at peak and the battery status is reliably maintained. I never use rechargeable batteries in radios just to make sure I’m getting peak performance when I use them.
> On 11 Oct 2018, at 11:51 am, Hamit Campos <[email protected]> wrote: > > Hi. It's alright to use NIMH batteries in the Olympus LS-14 right? Because > according to Neal the Manual says Alqualine. Like Neal said though it doesn't > say NIMH won't work, but I will tell ya they do. It's just Olympus says to > use alkaline. How hard core should 1 listen to that? Obviously too it won't > charge NIMH but that's to be expected and it's obvious. Thanks. > > > > > -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- Groups.io Links: You receive all messages sent to this group. View/Reply Online (#1354): https://groups.io/g/all-audio/message/1354 Mute This Topic: https://groups.io/mt/27237468/21656 Group Owner: [email protected] Unsubscribe: https://groups.io/g/all-audio/leave/1074140/405281159/xyzzy [[email protected]] -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
