Maxell Batteries

J

J.B. Wood

Guest
Hello, all and I'd welcome any input on subject quality relative to
equivalents available from Duracell or Energizer. The Maxell SR626SW
(Eveready 377) Silver Oxide and CR2016 Lithium cells are standard usage
in electronic watches, and I'd like to focus on these. Thanks for your
time and comment. Sincerely,

--
J. B. Wood e-mail: arl_123234@hotmail.com
 
On Monday, April 2, 2018 at 12:43:09 PM UTC-4, J.B. Wood wrote:
Hello, all and I'd welcome any input on subject quality relative to
equivalents available from Duracell or Energizer. The Maxell SR626SW
(Eveready 377) Silver Oxide and CR2016 Lithium cells are standard usage
in electronic watches, and I'd like to focus on these. Thanks for your
time and comment. Sincerely,

--
J. B. Wood e-mail: arl_123234@hotmail.com

Maxell makes a good battery and have been around for many year. At the same time, we bulk-purchase our button cells.

https://www.bestbyte.net/energizer-cr2016-lithium-coin-cell-battery-bulk-tray-packaging.html


Peter Wieck
Melrose Park, PA
 
On Monday, 2 April 2018 17:43:09 UTC+1, J.B. Wood wrote:

Hello, all and I'd welcome any input on subject quality relative to
equivalents available from Duracell or Energizer. The Maxell SR626SW
(Eveready 377) Silver Oxide and CR2016 Lithium cells are standard usage
in electronic watches, and I'd like to focus on these. Thanks for your
time and comment. Sincerely,

I don't have data on silver & lithium, but when it comes to alkalines most brands are not far apart in capacity. Silly advertising budgets don't increase the capacity it turns out.


NT
 
On Mon, 2 Apr 2018 13:09:48 -0700 (PDT), tabbypurr@gmail.com wrote:

> when it comes to alkalines most brands are not far apart in capacity.

True. Energizer (tm) batteries are supposed to have enhanced anti-leak
protection. This appears to be accurate. I recently replaced some that were
in a cheapo digital camera I keep in my car for accidents. They had been
full, but had not leaked fluid at all even though completely dead after a
few years of current microdrainage. Like most devices, the 'off' setting
(move a slide to cover the lens) apparently just puts it into a low-power
standby mode. They had endured a few winters (min -30C) and summers (max
+50C? interior) as well.

Despite that, I plan to leave them loose in the case in the future.
 
On 4/2/2018 4:34 PM, Mike_Duffy wrote:
On Mon, 2 Apr 2018 13:09:48 -0700 (PDT), tabbypurr@gmail.com wrote:

when it comes to alkalines most brands are not far apart in capacity.

True. Energizer (tm) batteries are supposed to have enhanced anti-leak
protection. This appears to be accurate. I recently replaced some that were
in a cheapo digital camera I keep in my car for accidents. They had been
full, but had not leaked fluid at all even though completely dead after a
few years of current microdrainage. Like most devices, the 'off' setting
(move a slide to cover the lens) apparently just puts it into a low-power
standby mode. They had endured a few winters (min -30C) and summers (max
+50C? interior) as well.

Despite that, I plan to leave them loose in the case in the future.

I just put a piece of paper between one battery and it's contact.
 
On 05/04/18 19:31, Bob F wrote:
On 4/2/2018 4:34 PM, Mike_Duffy wrote:
On Mon, 2 Apr 2018 13:09:48 -0700 (PDT), tabbypurr@gmail.com wrote:

when it comes to alkalines most brands are not far apart in capacity.
..

Despite that, I plan to leave them loose in the case in the future.

I just put a piece of paper between one battery and it's contact.

I've had cells leak when not installed, but kept in a drawer.

Remove 'em.

--
Adrian C
 

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