+acachebox Posted June 17, 2013 Share Posted June 17, 2013 I was thinking of using Eneloop rechargeable batteries in my 450. I now see that they are only 1.2 volts and the current batteries I am using, 1.5 volts are coming out with 1.2 volts when the unit is saying Low Voltage. Others have said they are using the eneloops. Am I missing something here? Quote Link to comment
alandb Posted June 17, 2013 Share Posted June 17, 2013 (edited) You need to set the battery type to "Rechargeable NiMH" in Settings > System > Battery Type.The 1.2 V Eneloops will work great in your Oregon. Edited June 17, 2013 by alandb Quote Link to comment
+acachebox Posted June 18, 2013 Author Share Posted June 18, 2013 You need to set the battery type to "Rechargeable NiMH" in Settings > System > Battery Type.The 1.2 V Eneloops will work great in your Oregon. 2 interesting points. The MH-C9000 charger does not seam to have any way of changing the voltage setting and the Eneloop batteries that are listed as 1.2 volts have 1.34 volts on them out of the box. I charged 2 batteries on the brake in cycle and they now have 1.43volts on them. Did I destroy 2 batteries? Quote Link to comment
alandb Posted June 18, 2013 Share Posted June 18, 2013 I think it is normal for fully charged NiMH to show higher voltage when measured with no load. I don't think you destroyed them. Quote Link to comment
+Egnix Posted June 18, 2013 Share Posted June 18, 2013 You need to set the battery type to "Rechargeable NiMH" in Settings > System > Battery Type.The 1.2 V Eneloops will work great in your Oregon. 2 interesting points. The MH-C9000 charger does not seam to have any way of changing the voltage setting and the Eneloop batteries that are listed as 1.2 volts have 1.34 volts on them out of the box. I charged 2 batteries on the brake in cycle and they now have 1.43volts on them. Did I destroy 2 batteries? ~1.4V is a common charged voltage of a NiMH battery. 1.2V is just the nominal rating for the battery. Any decent modern battery charger can properly charge NiMH batteries. Quote Link to comment
+teamvoyagr Posted June 21, 2013 Share Posted June 21, 2013 NiMH batteries require specific chargers. Charging the batteries will make them hot and it if they get too hot you will shorten the life of the battery. Good chargers measure both the temperature of the battery and the change in voltage. If you use a lot of NiMH batteries you might be better of getting a good charger. While NiMH batteries start off with at 1.2v they lose their power much slower than alkaline batteries. Alkaline batteries start at 1.5v but lose power quickly. High quality low self-discharge NiMH are the way to go. Quote Link to comment
+GeoDigger1222 Posted June 22, 2013 Share Posted June 22, 2013 I recently got 16 hours on my 450 hiking in Yellowstone using the black eneloops rated at 2400 mAh. I charge them using a Lacrosse charger at the lowest setting 200mAh. Quote Link to comment
+acachebox Posted June 23, 2013 Author Share Posted June 23, 2013 OK So I am charging eneloop 1,900 batteries at 200 ma with a MH-C9,000. Am I OK with this or does the charger or batteries go back? Quote Link to comment
JustMyName Posted June 23, 2013 Share Posted June 23, 2013 (edited) OK So I am charging eneloop 1,900 batteries at 200 ma with a MH-C9,000. Am I OK with this or does the charger or batteries go back? Those are great batteries. Just put them in the C9000 and use the default charge current (1000mA, which is ~0.5C). Keep them in the charger an additional two hours after completion as the C9000 terminates early and will top-off at 100mA. Edited June 23, 2013 by JustMyName Quote Link to comment
+Viajero Perdido Posted June 24, 2013 Share Posted June 24, 2013 Great batteries, great charger, totally compatible with each other. Your charger manual suggests a minimum charging rate of 0.3C (0.3 x capacity), or in this case, about 600ma. Less than that, the charger may not be able to detect when the cells are fully charged. Quote Link to comment
+BCNorwich Posted June 24, 2013 Share Posted June 24, 2013 Hi, If you buy a good charger that monitors the charge rate and temperature ect. Then don't try to charge the very cheap batteries from the the big shop on the net. You'll likely blow the charger and maybe cause a fire, I know to my cost, I blew an Anmann charger, £60 worth. Regards Bernard Quote Link to comment
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