Li-ion 1,5Volt AA batteries ...


Marc Coevoet
 

Hello,

What do the UL people think of Li ION 1,5 Volt AA batteries?

https://aliexpress.com/premium/li-ion-1%252C5v.html?d=y&origin=y&catId=0&initiative_id=SB_20221102003611&SearchText=li%20ion%201,5v&spm=a2g0o.detail.1000002.0



These promise 3000+mah.

Marc
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Paul Blundell
 

I have not used th but they sound interesting.


On Wed, 2 Nov 2022, 8:18 pm Marc Coevoet, <sintsixtus@...> wrote:
Hello,

What do the UL people think of Li ION 1,5 Volt AA batteries?

https://aliexpress.com/premium/li-ion-1%252C5v.html?d=y&origin=y&catId=0&initiative_id=SB_20221102003611&SearchText=li%20ion%201,5v&spm=a2g0o.detail.1000002.0



These promise 3000+mah.

Marc
--
The "Penguin" has arrived - and he's not going away - ever.
For former Apple users: Xubuntu.org (menu's up left)
For former Windows users: Lubuntu.org (menu's down left)






Dirk
 

These promise 3000+mah.
No, they promise 3000 mWh.
That would be 2000 mAh at 1.5V.


Michael Schuster
 
Edited

They are unsuitable for use in DXing as the buck circuit produces broadband RFI right inside your radio.

They do work fine for low-current (<2A) voltage sensitive applications where a NiMH cell would prematurely trigger the low voltage alarm, or affect performance (e.g. the motor inside a powered toothbrush).


Peter Laws
 

On Wed, Nov 2, 2022 at 7:21 AM Michael Schuster <schuster.ma@...> wrote:

They are unsuitable for use in DXing as the buck circuit produces broadband RFI right inside your radio.
When I saw the subject, I immediately thought "doesn't that chemistry
create a 4.2-V cell?" And you have answered the question in my head
with "buck circuit". Fine idea, but rarely done without RFI as you
hint at.

Without googling, it goes something like:

Lead-acid - 2 V
Alkaline/carbon-zinc/etc al - 1.5 V
NiCd/NiMH - 1.2 or 1.25 V (I forget!)
Lithium (all variants?) - 4.2 V

I should probably google that ...


--
Peter Laws | N5UWY / VE2UWY | plaws plaws net | Travel by Train!


Michael Schuster
 

On Wed, Nov 2, 2022 at 09:07 AM, Peter Laws wrote:
When I saw the subject, I immediately thought "doesn't that chemistry
create a 4.2-V cell?" And you have answered the question in my head
with "buck circuit". Fine idea, but rarely done without RFI as you
hint at.

Without googling, it goes something like:

Lead-acid - 2 V
Alkaline/carbon-zinc/etc al - 1.5 V
NiCd/NiMH - 1.2 or 1.25 V (I forget!)
Lithium (all variants?) - 4.2 V

I should probably google that ...

Inside there is a tiny cylindrical 4.2V LiIon cell and a small PCB which contains the charging and buck circuit.

The buck component brings the output voltage down to a regulated 1.5V at ~2A max.

The charge circuit expects an input of 4.2V - 5V.

It can be fed either by a USB port mounted on the side of the cell itself, or externally using a dedicated charger.
All that the external charger does is to blindly apply the input voltage.
A traditional LiIon charger would usually not work as it should interpret a cell outputting 1.5V as beyond salvage, and the output voltage would never rise as charging proceeds.