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expiredEragorn | Staff posted Apr 05, 2023 08:47 PM
expiredEragorn | Staff posted Apr 05, 2023 08:47 PM

16-Pack Amazon Basics Rechargeable 1.2V 850mAh AAA NiMh High-Capacity Batteries

$14

$15

6% off
Amazon
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Amazon has 16-Pack Amazon Basics Rechargeable 1.2V 850mAh AAA NiMh High-Capacity Batteries on sale for $12.80 > now $13.93. Shipping is free w/ Prime or on $25+ orders.

Thanks to Staff Member Eragorn for sharing this deal.

Note, product must be sold/shipped by Amazon

About the Product
  • 16-Pack 1.2V 850mAh AAA NiMH Rechargeable Batteries
  • Maintains 80% capacity for 24 months
  • Delivered pre-charged and ready to use
  • Can be recharged up to 500 times w/ minimal power lost
  • Ships in a Certified Frustration Free Packaging

Editor's Notes

Written by Discombobulated | Staff

Original Post

Written by Eragorn | Staff
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Amazon has 16-Pack Amazon Basics Rechargeable 1.2V 850mAh AAA NiMh High-Capacity Batteries on sale for $12.80 > now $13.93. Shipping is free w/ Prime or on $25+ orders.

Thanks to Staff Member Eragorn for sharing this deal.

Note, product must be sold/shipped by Amazon

About the Product
  • 16-Pack 1.2V 850mAh AAA NiMH Rechargeable Batteries
  • Maintains 80% capacity for 24 months
  • Delivered pre-charged and ready to use
  • Can be recharged up to 500 times w/ minimal power lost
  • Ships in a Certified Frustration Free Packaging

Editor's Notes

Written by Discombobulated | Staff

Original Post

Written by Eragorn | Staff

Community Voting

Deal Score
+46
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Price Intelligence

Model: Amazon Basics 16-Pack AAA High-Capacity 850 mAh Rechargeable Batteries, Pre-Charged, Recharge up to 500x

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Sort: Lowest to Highest | Last Updated 10/13/2025, 07:13 PM
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Top Comments

MWink
2253 Posts
3163 Reputation
Standard capacity batteries are a better choice in that case. They will generally hold up better and have lower self-discharge. I have had such bad experiences with high capacity batteries (including Eneloops) that I now actively avoid them. As a side note, I bought the standard capacity Amazon Basics AAAs and they tested 850mAh on average.
anthem_the_cat
894 Posts
314 Reputation
Don't bother with this e-waste. Get eneloops, LADDA, or energizer; just make sure it's "made in Japan" like FDK.
TealIdea227
1052 Posts
100 Reputation
I've spent a whole pile of money on Eneloop non-Pro AAs that I expect to be reliable and stand up to high current draws in an emergency or on a regular basis. But there's plenty of applications where I just need a battery that won't leak and probably won't be cycled twice a year - especially in AAA. I consider these my #2 choice, and you can buy twice as many, if price is preventing you from going alkaleak-less.

Edit: I failed to notice these were "high capacity" and would prefer standard capacity.

57 Comments

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Apr 10, 2023 01:49 PM
3,280 Posts
Joined Aug 2006
jottectApr 10, 2023 01:49 PM
3,280 Posts
The biggest problem with most of these "cheap" AA/AAA re-chargeables comes with a similar scenario: you put these batteries in a device that will be used for a while and then will just sit there, slowly discharging the batteries... After more than 6mo you stumble onto it and batteries are drained. You drop them in the charger and... they do not charge, they are "dead", e-waste how someone was saying.
What has happened is this: the battery drained to about ~0.6 - 0.7 Volts, where most of the chargers will not charge the battery because the patient is "dead" or no longer "recognized".
If you do not know how to "revive" a dead re-chargeable with another good battery and two wires (search youtube) try getting a charger that is able to "revive" a discharged battery, and the only one I know it is able to do so is Nitecore D2/D4. I have 4 chargers and two Nitecore, i4 and d2, but only the last one is "defibrillator".
In the past 10 years I have been using almost 100 AA/AAA re-chargeables and I ended up discarding only about two or three of them that I was not able to revive. I have many brands including no-names like RayHom, Tenergy, EBL and of course many amazon and eneloop and I still have to see one eneloop going down to 0.7V... but I'm using Tenergy in my mole chaser device and sometimes I forgot to replace them so they were all at 0.6V, but I was always able to revive them and they still hold a charge almost like 7 years ago when I got them (yes, I just checked amazon orders).

Conclusion: do not discard NiMh re-chargeables when they do not charge, instead try to revive them.
P.S. this does not apply to Li-Ion rechargeables!
Apr 10, 2023 03:05 PM
84 Posts
Joined Jul 2016
ciditinApr 10, 2023 03:05 PM
84 Posts
Are these good for Blink security cameras? Or which is better, would anyone refer something? Thanks.
Apr 10, 2023 03:37 PM
60 Posts
Joined May 2019
EdwardR24Apr 10, 2023 03:37 PM
60 Posts
Quote from Dead Elvis :
Yes they can.
Can the Energizer charger be used as well?
Apr 10, 2023 04:30 PM
2,888 Posts
Joined Aug 2017
UkeDogApr 10, 2023 04:30 PM
2,888 Posts
Quote from TealIdea227 :
I've spent a whole pile of money on Eneloop non-Pro AAs that I expect to be reliable and stand up to high current draws in an emergency or on a regular basis. But there's plenty of applications where I just need a battery that won't leak and probably won't be cycled twice a year - especially in AAA. I consider these my #2 choice, and you can buy twice as many, if price is preventing you from going alkaleak-less.

Edit: I failed to notice these were "high capacity" and would prefer standard capacity.
Good to know. I'm going one better, and holding out for "low capacity".
Apr 10, 2023 04:42 PM
9,332 Posts
Joined Mar 2007
handyguyApr 10, 2023 04:42 PM
9,332 Posts
Not used, batteries enter sleep mode, won't charge. I use a cheap EBL charger, it ignores the this sleep mode and charges the battery. Have not thrown a battery out.
Apr 10, 2023 05:36 PM
387 Posts
Joined Mar 2016
harley48Apr 10, 2023 05:36 PM
387 Posts
Quote from handyguy :
Not used, batteries enter sleep mode, won't charge. I use a cheap EBL charger, it ignores the this sleep mode and charges the battery. Have not thrown a battery out.
Completely false. Old non-LSD NiMh, or crappy/worn batteries have a high self discharge. They don't enter 'sleep mode', they discharge and go dead.
Apr 10, 2023 06:28 PM
4,231 Posts
Joined Dec 2006
fvshaggyApr 10, 2023 06:28 PM
4,231 Posts
Quote from jottect :
The biggest problem with most of these "cheap" AA/AAA re-chargeables comes with a similar scenario: you put these batteries in a device that will be used for a while and then will just sit there, slowly discharging the batteries... After more than 6mo you stumble onto it and batteries are drained. You drop them in the charger and... they do not charge, they are "dead", e-waste how someone was saying.
What has happened is this: the battery drained to about ~0.6 - 0.7 Volts, where most of the chargers will not charge the battery because the patient is "dead" or no longer "recognized".
If you do not know how to "revive" a dead re-chargeable with another good battery and two wires (search youtube) try getting a charger that is able to "revive" a discharged battery, and the only one I know it is able to do so is Nitecore D2/D4. I have 4 chargers and two Nitecore, i4 and d2, but only the last one is "defibrillator".
In the past 10 years I have been using almost 100 AA/AAA re-chargeables and I ended up discarding only about two or three of them that I was not able to revive. I have many brands including no-names like RayHom, Tenergy, EBL and of course many amazon and eneloop and I still have to see one eneloop going down to 0.7V... but I'm using Tenergy in my mole chaser device and sometimes I forgot to replace them so they were all at 0.6V, but I was always able to revive them and they still hold a charge almost like 7 years ago when I got them (yes, I just checked amazon orders).

Conclusion: do not discard NiMh re-chargeables when they do not charge, instead try to revive them.
P.S. this does not apply to Li-Ion rechargeables!

Any recommendations for a good battery reviver. I have an older OPUS BT-C2400 and there have been a few batteries I couldn't bring back to life.
1

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Apr 10, 2023 10:05 PM
62 Posts
Joined Oct 2021
SmilingHorn700Apr 10, 2023 10:05 PM
62 Posts
Quote from fvshaggy :
Any recommendations for a good battery reviver. I have an older OPUS BT-C2400 and there have been a few batteries I couldn't bring back to life.
I just put a good battery & dead battery on their (-) ends and use a copper wire to "shock" it on the (+) ends for 5-10 seconds, then recharge. Works 99% of the time.
Apr 10, 2023 10:09 PM
43 Posts
Joined Dec 2014
lugeeApr 10, 2023 10:09 PM
43 Posts
Shows $13.98 for me.
Apr 11, 2023 04:19 AM
9,007 Posts
Joined Jul 2006
NattefrostApr 11, 2023 04:19 AM
9,007 Posts
i have Sanyo Eneloop made in Japan AAA 900mAh that wont recharge- tried everything la crosse and fujitsu chargers didnt work
Apr 11, 2023 12:24 PM
3,280 Posts
Joined Aug 2006
jottectApr 11, 2023 12:24 PM
3,280 Posts
Quote from fvshaggy :
Any recommendations for a good battery reviver. I have an older OPUS BT-C2400 and there have been a few batteries I couldn't bring back to life.
There is no rule that says every battery can be brought back to life!
As I said, I can vouch for Nitecore D2, but if you have only a few batteries, try using a good one and two wires. Only once I was able to revive with wires a battery that could not be revived by D2.

Quote from Nattefrost :
i have Sanyo Eneloop made in Japan AAA 900mAh that wont recharge- tried everything la crosse and fujitsu chargers didnt work
Did you read what I explained a couple posts above? Just 'revive' your batteries!
Apr 13, 2023 05:13 PM
1,452 Posts
Joined Aug 2011
a_landApr 13, 2023 05:13 PM
1,452 Posts
Quote from onikage :
Same. It's the voice remote, right? No amount of Googling has produced a solution other than a solid pool of rechargeables.
exactly. the roku remote with the built in battery is stupid expensive and i've been trying to wait out a deal on one forever lol. i'd insta buy a $10 model

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