nimh technology is nimh technolgy, I havent
read anything anwhere that there are different/special
characteristics for any of these cells...

JC O'Connell
[email protected]
 


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of
Bruce Walker
Sent: Monday, December 22, 2008 11:39 AM
To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List
Subject: Re: rechargeable batteries - any wisdom?


Dario Bonazza wrote:
> Sanyo Eneloop and Uniross Hybrio are the way to go. They last a lot
> longer than standard Ni-MH (twice or more), especially because they 
> have negligible auto-discharge as opposed to extra-quick auto 
> discharge of high-mAh rated NiMH batteries. That's precious if you 
> don't use/recharge your batteries daily or so.

I second (or third) the Sanyo Eneloop recommendation.  Dario, thanks for

mentioning the Uniross Hybrio--I hadn't heard of those.

I'm getting 800-900 shots from a charged set of 4 Eneloops in my K100D 
Super. These batteries not only hold their charge better, but they don't

suffer from voltage-droop as they discharge.  But when they are finally 
flat, you get very little warning and then the camera shuts off, so buy 
two full sets and keep the charged spares with you!

Get a "smart charger".  This is the kind that only charges the cells 
until they are measured to be "full" (charge current drops to a 
trickle).  They charge faster and are kinder to the cells.  I really 
like the Ansmann I bought a year and a bit ago.

-bmw

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