Yeah, it's a shame how many electric toothbrushes I've had to throw out
when the batteries go bad. Good brands also, but they don't make them
serviceable.

Since I'm in a hurricane zone, I have flashlights with 18650 cells. more
cells than flashlights. Worst case scenario is that I can't get gas for the
generator and the power is out for a week or whatever (and if you read my
previous posts I'll solve that problem soon) I can charge batteries from my
off grid backyard solar.

My current problem is that comcast/xfinity goes out more than the power
flickers. I can't wait for buried fiber on my street to come one day.

On Sat, Apr 12, 2025 at 2:51 AM Mark Tinka via NANOG <nanog@lists.nanog.org>
wrote:

>
>
> On 4/9/25 21:17, Gary Sparkes wrote:
>
> > Correction on that, the lithium polymers such as in modern cellphones
> are a fair bit different. NMC was used in non-LiPo cells for early mobile
> devices, however, was a thing in many variants.
>
> NMC can still be found in things like handheld power tools.
>
> Today, Li-Po (Lithium Polymer) and LCO (Lithium Cobalt Oxide) are
> typical options for mobile devices.
>
>
> > I was thinking more along the lines of things like early laptops that
> switched off nicad/nimh while looking at devices on my desk
>
> Back when we spent quite a bit of cash on camcorders, we experienced
> plenty of NiMH batteries. It's quite an inferior battery, but it served
> its purpose well, at the time.
>
> I still find NiMH batteries shipping in modern gear today, e.g., low-end
> electric toothbrushes. I generally avoid these where possible, and buy
> Lithium-based toothbrushes :-).
>
> Mark.
> _______________________________________________
> NANOG mailing list
>
> https://lists.nanog.org/archives/list/nanog@lists.nanog.org/message/O6SPTMAZELLQVWHFXHD4WKSIMNYTRFCH/
>
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