expirediconian | Staff posted May 11, 2021 04:21 PM
Item 1 of 5
Item 1 of 5
expirediconian | Staff posted May 11, 2021 04:21 PM
NANFU Batteries: 4-Count 9V $5.60, 48-Count AA $9.88, 48-Count AAA
w/ Subscribe & Save$8.60
$20
57% offAmazon
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Check prior posts on these subpar Chinese batteries.
At this quality you are better off buying the batteries at harbor freight. they are cheaper than these too!
edit:
here are the coupons for harbor freight. 24 pack for $1.39, choice of AA or AAA.
https://www.hfqpdb.com/coupons/24...5.8698.jpg
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Comes out to 15.6 cents per ACDelco AA battery on Woot vs 20.5 cents per Nanfu AA here.
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But for disposable AA/AAA batteries there is only two main types. They are either alkaline or lithium. Lithium can withstand and work at higher or lower temperatures compared to alkaline. They are generally used for outdoor devices and more expensive. There's is also a lithium-ion variation which is rechargeable. Then there's NiCD and NiMH which are both also used for rechargeable batteries.
Considering alkaline batteries are the cheapest to produce, I don't see how the ACDelco can be anything else. But even if they are you can put them in any device that uses standard 1.5 AA batteries and it will work fine.
But for disposable AA/AAA batteries there is only two main types. They are either alkaline or lithium. Lithium can withstand and work at higher or lower temperatures compared to alkaline. They are generally used for outdoor devices and more expensive. There's is also a lithium-ion variation which is rechargeable. Then there's NiCD and NiMH which are both also used for rechargeable batteries.
Considering alkaline batteries are the cheapest to produce, I don't see how the ACDelco can be anything else. But even if they are you can put them in any device that uses standard 1.5 AA batteries and it will work fine.
Lithium and rechargeables are in a different category. For the AA and AAA common use there's alkaline and the non-alkaline. If it's alkaline it'll almost always say alkaline on it. If it's the other stuff they will use words like "heavy duty" which coincidentally they are not. HF also has heavy duty and alkaline. There's a reason why heavy duty is much cheaper. Yes they both will start out at 1.5v. but the heavy duty will not last anywhere close to alkaline. For the reviews I've seen basically all the alkalines are about the same with a bit of variation, and vastly ahead of the heavy duty marketed stuff.
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