Amazon has 24-Count Amazon Basics Rechargeable AA 2000 mAh NiMH Batteries on sale for $19.84 - 5% with Subscribe & Save = $18.85. Shipping is free w/ Prime or on $35+ orders.
Thanks to Community Member Donnahv for sharing this deal.
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Amazon has 24-Count Amazon Basics Rechargeable AA 2000 mAh NiMH Batteries on sale for $19.84 - 5% with Subscribe & Save = $18.85. Shipping is free w/ Prime or on $35+ orders.
Thanks to Community Member Donnahv for sharing this deal.
Model: Amazon Basics 24-Pack AA Rechargeable Batteries, Recharge up to 1000x, Standard Capacity 2000 mAh, Pre-Charged
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These Amazon Basics batteries don't last more than a handful of recharge cycles or a year. I had to throw them all away. I switched to Eneloops and they are still good many years later.
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These Amazon Basics batteries don't last more than a handful of recharge cycles or a year. I had to throw them all away. I switched to Eneloops and they are still good many years later.
batteries are just okay, but hard to beat the price. I rather have 2 of these than 1 eneloop since I have 2 toddlers and they seem to have too many devices.
These Amazon Basics batteries don't last more than a handful of recharge cycles or a year. I had to throw them all away. I switched to Eneloops and they are still good many years later.
Yep, they can barely make 2 years anymore. Eneloops i have has for decades still hold 95% capacity. Buy it for life almost.
These are great for my kids toys. Pair with a good charger like a powerex. At this price if a few get thrown away or abused do you really care? You still will get 50 charges minimum out of them likely more and save a ton of money
Wow, I actually clicked on this just to post my positive experience with them and I'm surprised others have had issues. Granted I only have 8 of them, but they are part of my "daily swap" as I use a pair of rechargeables to power my Roku remote with streaming audio. I use those, enelope and PowerOwls interchangeably with no problems. Purchased the Amazon ones a year ago.
Wow, I actually clicked on this just to post my positive experience with them and I'm surprised others have had issues. Granted I only have 8 of them, but they are part of my "daily swap" as I use a pair of rechargeables to power my Roku remote with streaming audio. I use those, enelope and PowerOwls interchangeably with no problems. Purchased the Amazon ones a year ago.
Agree. I haven't had mine long but so far I've had nothing but a positive experience too. Anything is better than wasting money on alkalines
These Amazon Basics batteries don't last more than a handful of recharge cycles or a year. I had to throw them all away. I switched to Eneloops and they are still good many years later.
My original Sanyo Eneloops, almost 20 years old, still test nearly like new for capacity and impedance.
Most of my Amazon, GS Yuasa, and Energizer branded batteries have long been in the trash. They failed with potato capacity, high impedance or both.
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My limited experience is they work. You will get the occasional dud ones. Eneloop have better QC, but they will also die. Batteries are consumables.
The key is to get a good charger. Slow charging is best for batteries, don't overcharge and don't let them get hot and they will give you 500 plus cycles. I have cheap chinese batteries that are still working after 20 years of low drain usage.
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21 Comments
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank cdude
For things that are more critical I do have eneloops, but for the price these make great units I care less about in case of loss or damage.
For toys, may be it's fine. But for electronic devices that require long standby power (e.g. smart locks, remotes etc.), these are god awful
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Yep, they can barely make 2 years anymore. Eneloops i have has for decades still hold 95% capacity. Buy it for life almost.
Agree. I haven't had mine long but so far I've had nothing but a positive experience too. Anything is better than wasting money on alkalines
Most of my Amazon, GS Yuasa, and Energizer branded batteries have long been in the trash. They failed with potato capacity, high impedance or both.
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The key is to get a good charger. Slow charging is best for batteries, don't overcharge and don't let them get hot and they will give you 500 plus cycles. I have cheap chinese batteries that are still working after 20 years of low drain usage.
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