expired Posted by Red_Liz | Staff • Feb 29, 2024
Feb 29, 2024 8:06 PM
Item 1 of 3
Item 1 of 3
expired Posted by Red_Liz | Staff • Feb 29, 2024
Feb 29, 2024 8:06 PM
12-Pack 9V Amazon Basics Lithium High-Performance Batteries w/ 10-Yr Shelf Life
+ Free Shipping$20
$60
66% offRack To Door
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After the FTC scrutiny about anti-competitive monopoly behavior Amazon themselves shut down thousands of Amazon Basics product lines on their site. We bought it and have listed many items on Racktodoor, Woot, eBay, and 50+ other channels.
Here are a few articles about it if you want to read more:
https://www.vox.com/recode/2022/7...oncessions
https://www.ftc.gov/news-events/n...poly-power
https://www.pymnts.com/cpi_posts/...el-brands/
https://www.retailtouch
Amazon has not sold 12 packs of these in like two years!
https://www.amazon.com/AmazonBasi...B0
Remember when Amazon was closing warehouses in Q3/Q4 of 2022? They were selling these 9Vs and I bought an 8-pack back then for a crazy good deal. I bet some flipper loaded up and just realized their stuff is partially expired now and they want to dump it. That's my guess anyway.
I should note that even if these have been sitting around on a shelf for two years, it's still a good deal. The problem is we don't know how long, and if it's been more like four or five years, then that's totally different.
Q. Do you recommend using 9-volt lithium batteries to replace standard batteries in smoke detectors so that the replacement cycle can be extended?—William P. Bivins, Greenville, NC
A. Lithium 9Vs aren't recommended for smoke detectors unless you follow a strict battery replacement schedule. Those batteries maintain a high voltage until the end of their usable life, so they provide a much shorter "low battery" warning to alert you that it's time to swap in a fresh one. Alkaline batteries, by comparison, have a more gradual voltage drop-off, prolonging the "low battery" alert and greatly increasing the odds that you'll be nearby to get the alert.
But we change yearly, so should be OK. Price is close to Alkaline Sales.
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I would personally follow the device's directions to TEST / INSPECT / CLEAN the device regularly but as long as it works, I'd keep the installed battery in there for up to 8-10 years.
Usually smoke detectors etc. have a LED that blinks like every minute or so to let you know it has power and is working
so just glancing that it's still blinking now and then (e.g. weekly) is a good sign.
Then then you press TEST and make it alarm that confirms the function and that its alarm sounding works as well.
But a good 9V lithium battery can in many cases work for years, that's what they're designed to do.
Q. Do you recommend using 9-volt lithium batteries to replace standard batteries in smoke detectors so that the replacement cycle can be extended?—William P. Bivins, Greenville, NC
A. Lithium 9Vs aren't recommended for smoke detectors unless you follow a strict battery replacement schedule. Those batteries maintain a high voltage until the end of their usable life, so they provide a much shorter "low battery" warning to alert you that it's time to swap in a fresh one. Alkaline batteries, by comparison, have a more gradual voltage drop-off, prolonging the "low battery" alert and greatly increasing the odds that you'll be nearby to get the alert.
But we change yearly, so should be OK. Price is close to Alkaline Sales.
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