G
Guest
Guest
Re: Major consideration ... useable voltage !
Dry-cell when placed on load will fall off in voltage to significantly less than the 1.5v nominal it is supposed to be.
A rechargeable cell is able to sustain near its nominal voltage much better.
A dry-cell has a steady drop in voltage as it discharges.
A rechargeable has a near flat voltage line till near discharged where it then falls to zero very fast.
The above makes the rechargeable cell preferable in many cases as it will deliver better performance and also is rechargeable to deliver again.
There is a problem where many items with battery life indicators will be fooled by the apparent voltage of rechargeable cells.
My experience .... Dry-cell drops from 1.5V to 1.1 - 1.3V but with no real oomph behind it .... Rechargeable remains at about 1.1 - 1.2V and will deliver very high currents if called upon ...
Dry-cell when placed on load will fall off in voltage to significantly less than the 1.5v nominal it is supposed to be.
A rechargeable cell is able to sustain near its nominal voltage much better.
A dry-cell has a steady drop in voltage as it discharges.
A rechargeable has a near flat voltage line till near discharged where it then falls to zero very fast.
The above makes the rechargeable cell preferable in many cases as it will deliver better performance and also is rechargeable to deliver again.
There is a problem where many items with battery life indicators will be fooled by the apparent voltage of rechargeable cells.
My experience .... Dry-cell drops from 1.5V to 1.1 - 1.3V but with no real oomph behind it .... Rechargeable remains at about 1.1 - 1.2V and will deliver very high currents if called upon ...