Allkaline mAH ratings?

J

Jim Kemp

Guest
I have looked everywhere for mAH ratings for "standard" alkaline
batteries.

Can anyone please provide this information for sizes AA, AAA and 9V,
or a link to same.

Thank you,

Jim
 
Hi Jim,

You'll have to get past the marketing fluff and to the data sheets. Not
as easy as with electronic parts but some companies like Duracell
provide most everything you need on the web. Pick your battery type from
here:

http://www.duracell.com/oem/primary/alkaline/alkaline_manganese_data.asp

There will be no 'fixed' mAH rating as this depends on load current,
temperature and so on. Therefore, you will find graphs to see what mAH
rating you can expect for a certain load condition.

Regards, Joerg

http://www.analogconsultants.com
 
Jim Kemp <jkemp@underwood.com> wrote:

I have looked everywhere for mAH ratings for "standard" alkaline
batteries.
If you had looked everywhere you would have found them. www.duracell.com
has datasheets for example.
 
In article <sr2to0la5qg5imh6t356i6kqg2deq6fnnk@4ax.com>,
Jim Kemp <jkemp@underwood.com> wrote:
I have looked everywhere for mAH ratings for "standard" alkaline
batteries.

Can anyone please provide this information for sizes AA, AAA and 9V,
or a link to same.
9V -> 0.5 AH
AAA -> 1.0 AH
AA -> 2.5 AH
C -> 7.0 AH
D -> 14.0 AH


--
--
kensmith@rahul.net forging knowledge
 
Jim Kemp wrote:
I have looked everywhere for mAH ratings for "standard" alkaline
batteries.

Can anyone please provide this information for sizes AA, AAA and 9V,
or a link to same.

Thank you,

Jim
Here is a summary of capacities based on a rather arbitrary test
protocol:
http://www.zbattery.com/zbattery/batteryinfo.html

--
John Popelish
 
NB capacities vary between manufacturers, especially for Zinc-Carbons.
One reason capacities are not widely known.
 
nospam wrote:

Jim Kemp <jkemp@underwood.com> wrote:

I have looked everywhere for mAH ratings for "standard" alkaline
batteries.

If you had looked everywhere you would have found them. www.duracell.com
has datasheets for example.
And this link has also been seen before in this news group.

http://data.energizer.com/DataSheets.aspx

Try the big 'net super secret search engine www.google.com.

HTH, Steve
 

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