Jump to content

Fact, Opinion, Question, Joke?


Recommended Posts

:D

 

My world has been turned upside down.....

 

moote has stoped prefacing his posts and after a quick scan it seems he did so nearly 2 weeks ago. :D

 

Have I missed something on another thread?

 

Cheers

Dave

 

How will we ever know how to reply to a "Moote Comment?"

Link to comment

I was informed that it was getting on peoples goats; so you know me, never one to annoy, so I drop the prefix

 

Ahhhh...go on bring back the "Prefix".....it suited ya! :D

 

Go on, go on, go on!

 

Cheers

Dave

Vote

 

Should Moote bring back the Prefix?

Link to comment

Firstly, regarding the signature, whilst I agree with what Moote is saying about Lithium batteries, I think it might be stiring things slightly. Making such announcements in your sig line makes it harder for people to respond with their opinions.

 

About the post prefixing, as NickPick has said, if you're careful how you say things bearing in mind that readers don't have the benefit of knowing the tone in which you said it, you shouldn't have any problems. Smilies help with this to an extent.

Link to comment

Firstly, regarding the signature, whilst I agree with what Moote is saying about Lithium batteries, I think it might be stiring things slightly. Making such announcements in your sig line makes it harder for people to respond with their opinions.

 

This signature item confuses me because I think it's referring to Lithium-Ion rechargeable batteries. "Lithium" (on its own) batteries are disposable batteries with a much greater capacity than, say, alkalines, but they can't be recharged.

 

The kicker is that because Lithium-Ion rechargeables have an inherent voltage over 3V, they are not generally usable as plug-in replacements for NiCd, NiMH, or other rechargeables. They tend to show up as specialised shapes, for example for mobile phones or laptops. A few years ago a phone would typically have a NiCd/NiMH battery as standard with the option to spend £££ ($$$, €€€) on a Lithium-Ion replacement.

 

Generally, the best available rechargeables for AA/AAA-size applications, are NiMH, with up to 2500MaH capacity in AA and 1100MaH in AAA. These also have a memory effect, but it's less dramatic than with NiCD.

 

Another good source of batteries to run a GPSr, is to find alkalines which have been discarded from a digital camera. Generally they are good for a few hours of caching. Carry a spare set and you're both green and cheap!

Link to comment

Firstly, regarding the signature, whilst I agree with what Moote is saying about Lithium batteries, I think it might be stiring things slightly. Making such announcements in your sig line makes it harder for people to respond with their opinions.

 

I was just pointing out a common misconception that people make about Lithium technology rechargeable batteries; most know that NiCads have the chemical Memory effect, NiMH have the same effect but to a lesser extent. Incidentally you can actually recondition NiCads in a freeze, but I will not go into that here.

 

This signature item confuses me because I think it's referring to Lithium-Ion rechargeable batteries. "Lithium" (on its own) batteries are disposable batteries with a much greater capacity than, say, alkalines, but they can't be recharged.

 

The kicker is that because Lithium-Ion rechargeables have an inherent voltage over 3V, they are not generally usable as plug-in replacements for NiCd, NiMH, or other rechargeables. They tend to show up as specialised shapes, for example for mobile phones or laptops. A few years ago a phone would typically have a NiCd/NiMH battery as standard with the option to spend £££ ($$$, €€€) on a Lithium-Ion replacement.

I was actually referring to Lithium rechargeable battery technology as a whole as it is not just Lithium Ion, there are various Lithium Polymer batteries which are not Lithium Ion, but are rechargeable. The general rule on Lithium rechargeable batteries is to charge as frequent as possible and DO NOT fully / deep discharge.

 

Theses batteries are often found in PDAs, Palms, Laptops, Mobile Phones and Bluetooth GPSrs so it is a handy tip for quite a lot of cachers

Edited by Moote.
Link to comment

This signature item confuses me because I think it's referring to Lithium-Ion rechargeable batteries. "Lithium" (on its own) batteries are disposable batteries with a much greater capacity than, say, alkalines, but they can't be recharged.

 

The kicker is that because Lithium-Ion rechargeables have an inherent voltage over 3V, they are not generally usable as plug-in replacements for NiCd, NiMH, or other rechargeables. They tend to show up as specialised shapes, for example for mobile phones or laptops. A few years ago a phone would typically have a NiCd/NiMH battery as standard with the option to spend £££ ($$$, €€€) on a Lithium-Ion replacement.

 

Generally, the best available rechargeables for AA/AAA-size applications, are NiMH, with up to 2500MaH capacity in AA and 1100MaH in AAA. These also have a memory effect, but it's less dramatic than with NiCD.

 

Another good source of batteries to run a GPSr, is to find alkalines which have been discarded from a digital camera. Generally they are good for a few hours of caching. Carry a spare set and you're both green and cheap!

 

you should add this to your tag line

 

B)

Link to comment

This signature item confuses me because I think it's referring to Lithium-Ion rechargeable batteries. "Lithium" (on its own) batteries are disposable batteries with a much greater capacity than, say, alkalines, but they can't be recharged.

 

The kicker is that because Lithium-Ion rechargeables have an inherent voltage over 3V, they are not generally usable as plug-in replacements for NiCd, NiMH, or other rechargeables. They tend to show up as specialised shapes, for example for mobile phones or laptops. A few years ago a phone would typically have a NiCd/NiMH battery as standard with the option to spend £££ ($$$, €€€) on a Lithium-Ion replacement.

 

Generally, the best available rechargeables for AA/AAA-size applications, are NiMH, with up to 2500MaH capacity in AA and 1100MaH in AAA. These also have a memory effect, but it's less dramatic than with NiCD.

 

Another good source of batteries to run a GPSr, is to find alkalines which have been discarded from a digital camera. Generally they are good for a few hours of caching. Carry a spare set and you're both green and cheap!

 

you should add this to your tag line

 

B)

 

Could always suggest recharging disposable batteries, yes it is possible but don't try it unless you have the correct charger

Link to comment

Theses batteries are often found in PDAs, Palms, Laptops, Mobile Phones and Bluetooth GPSrs so it is a handy tip for quite a lot of cachers

 

OK I get your point now, I was being led astray by comparsions with NiCd which aren't usually an option for those devices, but if people think they have to discharge their Li-xx recharageables fully because of that, the info is indeed potentially useful. B)

Link to comment

If you put a high voltage such as 12volt car battery into an Nicad it will give them a renewed life.

You just touch the nicad with the 12 v for an instant. it will flash and away you go. ( P.S. It don't always work.)

Its like a lightning bolt that is put into the Frankinstein monster.

 

As for the origin of this thread. Yes bring it back.

Because I don't know what it is, so if it is brought back I will know what it was. B)

Link to comment

 

Could always suggest recharging disposable batteries, yes it is possible but don't try it unless you have the correct charger

 

OPINION

 

My point exactly, is moote joking, giving his opinion or stating a fact ?? :(

 

B):lol: :lol

 

 

As for the origin of this thread. Yes bring it back.

Because I don't know what it is, so if it is brought back I will know what it was. B)

 

FACT

 

we are soooo far OT it's not worth explaining :lol:

 

Cheers

Dave

Link to comment

This signature item confuses me because I think it's referring to Lithium-Ion rechargeable batteries. "Lithium" (on its own) batteries are disposable batteries with a much greater capacity than, say, alkalines, but they can't be recharged.

 

The kicker is that because Lithium-Ion rechargeables have an inherent voltage over 3V, they are not generally usable as plug-in replacements for NiCd, NiMH, or other rechargeables. They tend to show up as specialised shapes, for example for mobile phones or laptops. A few years ago a phone would typically have a NiCd/NiMH battery as standard with the option to spend £££ ($$$, €€€) on a Lithium-Ion replacement.

 

Generally, the best available rechargeables for AA/AAA-size applications, are NiMH, with up to 2500MaH capacity in AA and 1100MaH in AAA. These also have a memory effect, but it's less dramatic than with NiCD.

 

Another good source of batteries to run a GPSr, is to find alkalines which have been discarded from a digital camera. Generally they are good for a few hours of caching. Carry a spare set and you're both green and cheap!

 

you should add this to your tag line

 

B)

 

Could always suggest recharging disposable batteries, yes it is possible but don't try it unless you have the correct charger

 

My charger does just that, picked it up cheap at a QVC outlet.

Link to comment

 

Could always suggest recharging disposable batteries, yes it is possible but don't try it unless you have the correct charger

 

OPINION

 

My point exactly, is moote joking, giving his opinion or stating a fact ?? :laughing:

 

:laughing:;) :lol

 

Dave,

 

It is a Fact honest no April fool joke here

Link to comment

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...