• Rechargable Battery ?

    From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to ALL on Tue Jan 2 09:58:00 2024
    With regular AA alkaline batteries, when they corrode, it is time to throw
    them out.

    With rechargable AA alkaline batteries, is it also time to throw them out,
    or can you clean them up and recharge them? I have never had that happen before until recently so I was not sure.

    Mike


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  • From Jas Hud@618:250/1 to Mike Powell on Tue Jan 2 09:45:04 2024
    To: Mike Powell
    Re: Rechargable Battery ?
    By: Mike Powell to ALL on Tue Jan 02 2024 09:58 am

    From Newsgroup: micronet.chat.general

    With regular AA alkaline batteries, when they corrode, it is time to throw them out.

    With rechargable AA alkaline batteries, is it also time to throw them out, or can you clean them up and recharge them? I have never had that happen before until recently so I was not sure.

    Mike

    you mean corrode or actually leaking out material like batteries sometimes do? if you are losing the material inside, then toss them. if they rust, you can get a scotchbrite and buff the rust off.

    also there's different types of batteries. lithium is dangerous shit. don't risk anything with lithium batteries. i had a battery that i suspected was lower capacity and had a fake label over it. i used an xacto blade to get the label off to see the real one under. I knicked that fucker somehow and it ignited. I had to put it in a bucket with dirt to cut off the oxygen.
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  • From Digimaus@618:618/1 to Mike Powell on Tue Jan 2 11:28:10 2024
    Mike Powell wrote to ALL <=-

    With rechargable AA alkaline batteries, is it also time to throw them
    out, or can you clean them up and recharge them? I have never had that happen before until recently so I was not sure.

    If they're NiCads, they tend to build up memories which can be "fixed"
    by temporarily shorting the battery out, however, if they're older than
    three years, I'd just recycle them and get new ones. LiOn rechargables
    I'd be a lot more careful with due to their propensity to explode.

    -- Sean


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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to JAS HUD on Wed Jan 3 08:26:00 2024
    With rechargable AA alkaline batteries, is it also time to throw them out, or can you clean them up and recharge them? I have never had that happen before until recently so I was not sure.

    you mean corrode or actually leaking out material like batteries sometimes do?
    if you are losing the material inside, then toss them. if they rust, you can t a scotchbrite and buff the rust off.

    I call it corrode. It is on the terminal ends and looks like the stuff
    that forms on car battery terminals.

    also there's different types of batteries. lithium is dangerous shit. don't r
    k anything with lithium batteries. i had a battery that i suspected was lower pacity and had a fake label over it. i used an xacto blade to get the label o
    to see the real one under. I knicked that fucker somehow and it ignited. I ha
    to put it in a bucket with dirt to cut off the oxygen.

    I checked. I said "alkaline" but they are actually NiMH batteries.

    Mike


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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to DIGIMAUS on Wed Jan 3 08:26:00 2024
    If they're NiCads, they tend to build up memories which can be "fixed"
    by temporarily shorting the battery out, however, if they're older than
    three years, I'd just recycle them and get new ones. LiOn rechargables
    I'd be a lot more careful with due to their propensity to explode.

    They are NiMH and are certainly older than three years. I will probably
    just toss them and get new ones.

    Mike


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  • From Jas Hud@618:250/1 to Mike Powell on Thu Jan 4 04:44:20 2024
    To: Mike Powell
    Re: Rechargable Battery ?
    By: Mike Powell to JAS HUD on Wed Jan 03 2024 08:26 am

    I checked. I said "alkaline" but they are actually NiMH batteries.


    yeah if they leak, toss them. is there a lot of white powder?
    but check out the device for defects.
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  • From Arelor@618:250/24 to Mike Powell on Sat Jan 6 13:39:36 2024
    Re: Rechargable Battery ?
    By: Mike Powell to ALL on Tue Jan 02 2024 09:58 am

    With regular AA alkaline batteries, when they corrode, it is time to throw

    Mike

    I have seen Doctors clean corroded batteries from cheap equipment and keep using it. Batteries are cheap so I would not risk it if the batteries were really really bad.

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