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3x 4 Pack Energizer Ultimate Lithium AAA Batteries $27 + Free Postage @ Parasaus eBay

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3 x 4-Pack Energizer Ultimate Lithium AAA Batteries

This listing is for 3 x One pack of four genuine Energizer Ultimate Lithium AAA Batteries, new in packaging, as featured. Genuine retail product; not cheap Asian equivalents!

For the countless electronic gadgets that you can’t live without, get the latest Lithium battery technology that’s proven to be the world’s longest lasting AAA battery in high-tech devices.

Features:

Last up to 9x longer in digital cameras (versus Energizer MAX - results vary by camera)
Weigh 1/3 less than standard alkaline batteries
Perform in extreme temperatures from -40° to 60°C
20 Year shelf storage life
Leak resistant construction

Energizer Ultimate Lithium batteries deliver long-lasting power to keep up with today’s high-tech, power-hungry devices such as digital cameras, photo flash units, high-power toys and handheld GPS devices.

Guaranteed against faulty manufacture
Fast, free postage anywhere in Australia!

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closed Comments

  • +5

    I realise these are Lithium batteries vs Eneloops NiMh, but $27 for 12x AAA's that arent rechargeable doesn't sound cheap.
    I'm happy for someone to correct/edumacate me further… or am I just becoming used to Eneloop pricing to compare the constant deals popping up here?

    I recently picked up 8 Eneloops for $15 from Masters.. so for virtually the same money I could get 16 rechargeables instead of 12 Lithium but non-rechargeables.

    Or have I missed somthing?

    • +1

      Lithiums last a lot longer than your standard alkaline battery. Used to get these when 4.0MP point n shoots were in, powered by 2xAAs. These lasted approx 5 times the amount of time compared to when you used the alkaline batteries.
      Also these are lighter than alkalines, which are lighter than nimh/eneloops (weight depends on Mah rating). If one is travelling and doesn't want to carry an eneloop charger for their external flash, which typically requires 4xAA) these could be useful as extremely high quality disposables. Eneloops mean you require spares on you when you run out (carrying 4 spares for a flashgun), the charger and carrying back dead batteries back to home base for charging.
      If you want to make a fair comparison, do it with 18600 rechargeable batteries, different battery chemistry, different cost.
      4 pack of these usually cost $16+

      • Point taken (and thanks for the detailed response).

        But other than for traveling/weight, buying heavier NiMh rechargeables would still be far more economical. You're getting hundreds of charge cycles out of one battery, and then if you are cycling 2 or 3 sets through that one device your usage goes into the thousands of cycles.

        Even if the Lithium's last 5 times as long, and you still have to buy a decent charger, you're still hundreds of dollars in front.

        I hear what you are saying for travel and convenience, but Eneloops are still the way to go for most uses… surely?

        • +1

          I hear what you are saying for travel and convenience, but Eneloops are still the way to go for most uses… surely?

          If you don't have any high drain/high usage items in your household, then eneloops aren't for you (they're a waste in a doorbell/clock).

          You're getting hundreds of charge cycles out of one battery, and then if you are cycling 2 or 3 sets through that one device your usage goes into the thousands of cycles.

          Personally I think eneloops are for devices that run on AA/AAAs that should have had their own Li-Ion rechargeable battery packs. They're not for doorbells, TV remotes or clocks.

          For home use, I'd go with disposable alkalines (I got 300 fujitsu AAs for $25 from DSE) and Eneloops for high drainage items (flashguns/console controllers)

          Remember, Eneloop batteries are just one half of the system, don't forget the cost of a charger too, and the electricity required to rejuvenate your dead Eneloops.

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