From baxtrom@home.com Sat Aug 04 06:09:35 2001 To: misc_survivalism_moderated@yahoogroups.com Subject: [misc_survivalism_moderated] (fwd) Repost of an good article from a GPS group From: baxtrom@home.com Date: Sat, 04 Aug 2001 06:09:35 -0600 -------- On 4 Aug 2001 01:26:44 GMT, in misc.survivalism Dante'@inferno.net (Speaker to Animals) wrote: >I lurk in a wider group of NGs then I ever post in. >sci.geo.satellite-nav is a GPS (there are other satellite nav systems but GPS >is the most common) NG. LG hangs out there. >A guy wrote an interesting article on batteries. >A lot of us use batteries for many usefull activities. >It agrees (mostly) with my own studies and experience. > >>Matching the Battery to the Task >> >>By DAVID POGUE >> >>IF the F.B.I. ever singled me out for surveillance, its final >>report wouldn't hold much interest. "Wife, two kids, dog. >>Watches `Survivor.' Aversion to mayo." Only one line at the end >>of the document might seem a little peculiar. "Buys AA batteries >>by the gross." >> >>These days, most gizmos digital cameras, palmtops, music players >>seem to have been designed in a conspiracy with Duracell: they >>guzzle batteries like Gatorade at the marathon finish line. And >>it's not just me. According to an Industrial Market Research >>survey, the average American has about 25 battery-operated >>gadgets in the house, up from only 7 in 1987. >> >>The battery makers, of course, are delighted. All around us, we >>see ads for new kinds of batteries that "offer unsurpassed power >>for today's demanding devices," "last longer on high-tech >>devices" and have "longer service life." In the name of science, >>I decided to perform a few simple tests: I'd pop sets of each >>heavily hyped battery into, say, a Palm organizer and see how >>long they took to run down. What could be more scientific? >> >>As it turns out, almost anything. When I shared my plans with >>representatives of the Big Three Duracell, Eveready and Rayovac >>they told me, with the weary sighs of people who explain this >>point to journalists every day, that battery run-down tests are >>terribly misleading. For starters, a battery designed to excel >>in such a test would do poorly in the real world, where people >>play, pause and put aside their electronics for days or weeks. >>Who on earth actually runs a gadget continuously until it's out >>of power? (Game Boy owners, you can put your hands down.) >>Furthermore, the battery makers say, there is much greater >>inconsistency in the power consumption of supposedly identical >>devices than between two different batteries. >> >>"We'd be delighted to help you design valid tests," one battery >>company representative said. "And we'll look forward to reading >>the results around Christmas." >> >>When people conduct proper battery tests the repetitive, >>expensive, computer-controlled sort prescribed by the American >>National Standards Institute they find little variation across >>brands. One such test, published by Consumer Reports in March, >>offered a straightforward conclusion: When you need standard >>alkalines, ignore the marketing; just buy the cheapest ones. >> >>Whatever size you're looking for, from tiny AAA's to fat C's and >>D's, the hard part is figuring out whether to buy the standard >>alkalines or some other type. Until 1980, you had only one type >>to choose: the silver "heavy duty" batteries, like the Eveready >>types with the black-cat logo. But that era is long over. >> >>What replaced those old "standard" batteries is a wide and >>confusing range of higher-powered battery types: alkaline, >>premium alkaline, rechargeable alkaline, nickel metal hydride >>and lithium. (All told, 92 percent of the batteries sold >>nationwide are alkalines, which offer from two to six times as >>much life at roughly the same price as the old "heavy-duty" >>type.) >> >>It would feel glorious to declare one type the winner and then >>rent a movie to celebrate. Alas, batteries aren't that simple. >> >>In general, you can break down today's battery-operated devices >>into three categories. First, there are low-drain gadgets that >>sip power with all the gusto of an elderly aunt at afternoon >>tea: radios, clocks and flashlights that you keep on hand only >>for emergencies. >> >>The vast majority of today's electronic gizmos fall into the >>moderate-drain category: tape recorders, Game Boys, music and CD >>players, electronic toys, pagers, boomboxes, smoke detectors, >>remote controls and flashlights that you'll use a lot when >>camping, for example. The third category, high-drain devices, >>has only a few occupants like digital cameras, palmtops, remote- >>control toys, portable televisions and photo flash units but is >>likely to see more arrivals in the next few years. >> >>Once you've grasped that much background, buying batteries is >>fairly simple: for low- and medium-powered equipment, standard >>alkalines offer the best power per penny. >> >>Battery selection for high-drain gear, however, is where the >>game gets interesting. In a typical digital camera, standard >>alkalines might last all of 30 minutes, as many a crestfallen >>consumer discovers. >> >>That's why some companies are touting something called premium >>alkalines reformulated batteries designed to last longer than >>standard alkalines in high-drain gadgetry. (The improvements >>include, as Duracell puts it, "proprietary separator material, >>enhanced cathode design and a high-power anode composition," >>just as you probably suspected.) >> >>Duracell, for example, says that its premium battery, called >>Ultra, lasts up to twice as long as standard copper-tops in >>high- drain electronics. (Energizer's E2 line is also a premium >>alkaline, but Consumer Reports says it's not much more powerful >>than standard alkalines.) >> >>On the other hand, Ultra isn't as effective in medium- or >>low-drain electronics, offering an improvement of less than 50 >>percent, Duracell says, over standard alkalines. Any improvement >>is welcome, of course, but remember that Ultras cost about $1 >>apiece in a multipack, twice the price of store-brand regular >>alkalines. In other words, the convenience of Ultras is worth >>paying for in your Palm, television or digital camera but may be >>a waste of money in ordinary devices. >> >>But even premium alkalines can't power a digital camera for more >>than about 60 minutes of shooting, viewing and deleting pictures >>still not enough to last the whole day at Six Flags, let alone >>your two-week vacation. >> >>The final step up, therefore, is lithium batteries (not to be >>confused with lithium-ion laptop batteries) very expensive cells >>($10 for four) that last five times as long as standard >>alkalines in high-drain electronics. Only Energizer makes AA >>lithiums. Duracell makes a lithium power pack called CV3 that >>looks like two AA batteries fused together, but it fits only >>certain digital camera models from Casio, Kodak and Olympus, for >>example, that have been designed to accept them. >> >>If you use a high-drain device almost every day (this means you, >>palmtop and digital-photography addicts), the ultimate solution >>to the battery problem is nickel metal hydride (NiMH) batteries. >>Not only do they last even longer than premium alkalines, but >>for the ultimate in economy, you can recharge them 500 to 1,000 >>times by snapping them into a charger plugged into the wall. >> >>Rayovac's superb $30 charger (for AA, AAA and 9-volt sizes) >>rejuvenates drained NiMH's in one hour or less, a great >>improvement over previous chargers. (You'd think that engineers >>would have devised a shorthand for this battery's name, so they >>don't have to spend their days shouting, "Yo, Frank, should I >>put these nickel metal hydrides over on the nickel metal hydride >>shelf?" But they haven't.) >> >>The trouble with NiMH's is that they lose their charge over time >>about 15 percent per month. That makes them poor choices for >>long-term locations like remote controls, smoke detectors, >>digital cameras used only occasionally and, for that matter, the >>kitchen battery drawer. Some people keep one set in the charger >>and a second set in the camera, so they're always ready; but >>that's a lot of complication. At this point, rechargeables >>(including rechargeable alkalines, short-lived batteries that >>you can recharge only a few times) represent only 1 percent of >>battery sales. On the other hand, it's the fastest-growing >>battery category. >> >>If you'd like to minimize complexity and maximize economy, then, >>the bottom line is this: Buy standard alkalines for everyday >>gadgets. Cheap store brands generally do just as well as >>big-name brands. In digital cameras, palmtops and other >>high-powered gizmos, buy rechargeable nickel metal hydrides (for >>gear you use daily) or Duracell Ultras (for gear you store >>between uses). >> >>Oh, and don't bother trying to conduct your own battery of >>tests. >> >>-- >>[Don't send mail, address not working.] ------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor ---------------------~--> Small business owners... 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