Mat,

I think you're right. There wouldn't be Tesla electric Lotus Elise if  
Li-Ion suffered from the old NiCad memory effect.

Phil

--
Phil Ward
The Pottery

E: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
E: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
www.myspace.com/philwardmusic

Phil Ward is the exclusive UK distributor for Veillette Guitars. 
www.veilletteguitars.com

Consultant Designer of the Acoustic Energy AE22 nearfield monitor.

On 29 Sep 2008, at 14:27, Mat Walker wrote:

>
>
>>
>> 2008/9/29 Michael Dennis - Fanchants.com <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>> <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>>
>>
>>
>>    Hello everyone,
>>
>>    I've just taken delivery of my new iphone, very exciting. I am  
>> going
>>    through the instructions and there doesn't seem to be any start up
>>    instructions, namely how long to charge the battery - I've heard  
>> the
>>    battery life is bad. I obviously want to kick it off right and
>>    maximise the battery efficiency, so was wondering if there were  
>> any
>>    tips on the first charge. Should I charge it right up then run it
>>    right down then charge up again as per usual? Any tips on this or
>>    other iphone related things would be most welcome.
>>
>
> I could be wrong here but I believe that battery memory effect applied
> to the older NiCad batteries rather than the newer Li-Ion ones that  
> the
> iPhone uses.
>
> Mat
>
>
> >


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