In article , hasan wrote:
Can they (Eneloops) be charged in a conventional NiMH charger, or do
they require a proprietary charger?
Sanyo's own words:
"Basically eneloop is a modern Ni-MH battery, which can be charged
like any other Ni-MH battery.
Therefore eneloop can be charged also with other, modern chargers,
which are suitable to charge Ni-MH batteries.
However, SANYO cannot accept any liability for the function or safety
of chargers made by other manufacturers.
Also SANYO cannot be held responsible for any damage to eneloop
batteries caused by unsuitable chargers."
On a different Sanyo page (
http://www.eneloopusa.com/eneloop.html) they
say that they only provide warranty on the batteries if an Eneloop
or other Sanyo-branded NiMH charger is used. "Quick" chargers (those
charging in under 2 hours) should not be used, as these may reduce the
life of the battery... "2 hours or more" charging rate is recommended
(e.g. 0.5C or so).
A lot of people seem to like the various Maha chargers. One of my
friends here uses a Maha MH-C9000, which is relatively expensive
(currently $60 from Thomas Distributing) but is *extremely* flexible
and adaptable... you can select the charging and discharging rate for
each battery, perform one or more break-in or discharge/recharge
exercise cycles, etc. I have one on order and plan to try it out with
my various NiMH cells.
Seems to me that almost any modern NiMH charger, with a charge rate of
around 500 - 1000 mA per cell, and an effective full-charge cutoff
circuit (thermal and delta-V) would work fine with Eneloops and
similar low-self-discharge NiMH cells.
--
Dave Platt AE6EO
Friends of Jade Warrior home page:
http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior
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