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Panasonic Eneloop Quick Charger with 4x AA Pro Batteries $55.20 Delivered & Other Eneloop @ digiDirect via Everyday Market

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Seems like Woolworths and digiDirect are running sale on Eneloop batteries and chargers.

All items available:

Can order from digiDirect or Woolworths for those extra points:)

Related Stores

Woolworths
Woolworths
digiDirect
digiDirect

closed Comments

  • $59.95 with ClubTed subscription (free) @ Ted's cameras: https://www.teds.com.au/eneloop-pro-quick-charger-with-4x-pr…

  • Buy 1.5V lithium ion batteries. They're considerably cheaper. They have just as much capacity. And they're not just 1.5V, they keep outputting 1.5V until they go flat.

    • Any recommendations?

      e.g. These AAAs and charger on Amazon seem cheap

      • +1

        But how long will they last? I have NiMh batteries that are more than 10 years old and still working fine.

        Most li-ion batteries are down to half capacity by the 5-year mark, and unusable at 10 years.

        NiMh batteries can also be stored in a discharged state, with no degradation. Li-ion batteries should never be allowed to go completely flat, and degrade much more rapidly if stored in a discharged state.

      • Am I missing something here:

        Those are 1200mWh and are 1.5V

        1200/1.5 = 800mAh

        The eneloop pros are the same 1.5V and are 2550mah = 3875mWh

        That can't be right?

        • 1.2V?

        • Like many item descriptions on Amazon, it's rather muddled. They've said AA in a few spots where they should have said AAA.

          It appears the AAA li-ion batteries are 1200mWh and the AA ones are 2700mWh.

          AAA eneloop pros are 950mAh x 1.2V = 1140mWh

          AA eneloop pros are 2550mAh x 1.2V = 3060mWh

          So they're pretty close, unless they're giving the battery capacity instead of the power output, like power banks do. If that's the case, then small step-down switchmode supplies (like the ones in these batteries) are typically about 80% efficient at full load, so the actual power output will be about 80% of the stated figures - if your device draws close to the maximum power these batteries are rated for.

          If your device draws considerably less than the maximum power, switchmode power supplies are less efficient. Probably the worst case would be using these li-ion batteries in a low-power device, like a computer mouse or a wall clock. The efficiency of step-down switchmode power supplies drops considerably as the load power drops.

  • Item description on the site says CC17 charger when it should be the CC55 I believe.

    • Buy first, then complain about it not being the CC17 as described?
      Who knows? You could get it for free.

  • Not as cheap as they used to be

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