One of my Hitachi 18v batteries (EBM1830) has called it quits. After disassembly I found one cell (Sanyo UR18650W2) has failed. Now, I'm trying to decide -- Buy a $50 new Hitachi OEM pack of unknown age; $30 aftermarket pack of (as always) questionable quality; source a new Sanyo UR18650W2 cell (2pk for $13); or refresh all cells with Samsung 25R 2500mAh ($23 10pk). I'm leaning towards 10 cell replacement with a "supposedly" 1000mAh Samsung upgrade from the 1500mAh Sanyo's. The one downside I see is not gaining the spare electronics that would come with the purchase of a complete pack. I expect there'd be no conflict with the electronics/charging considering the only variable is capacity. Opinions?
*EDIT* -- Nix the $23/10pk Samsung batteries, quite possibly fake. $37/10pk for genuine, still not a leaning-towards option breaker. :-/
Bonus question! ;-)
I was attempting to adapt a wall charger for use with a battery operated motion sensor. The sensor works off 3 AA's in series and lists an input voltage of 5v. It doesn't list amperage but I'm assuming it would be sub 1A. I have way too many homeless wall chargers and found a few with rated output of 5v and from .25mA-1.0A. Thinking this would be a no-brainer I just tapped it in only to find it didn't work as expected. The sensor turned on but didn't operate properly. I found the charger, when attached to the sensor, was outputing nearly 9v and overwhelming the sensor sending into a reset loop. Could it be because the simple wall chargers have no (or weak) regulation? Insights appreciated.
*EDIT* -- Nix the $23/10pk Samsung batteries, quite possibly fake. $37/10pk for genuine, still not a leaning-towards option breaker. :-/
Bonus question! ;-)
I was attempting to adapt a wall charger for use with a battery operated motion sensor. The sensor works off 3 AA's in series and lists an input voltage of 5v. It doesn't list amperage but I'm assuming it would be sub 1A. I have way too many homeless wall chargers and found a few with rated output of 5v and from .25mA-1.0A. Thinking this would be a no-brainer I just tapped it in only to find it didn't work as expected. The sensor turned on but didn't operate properly. I found the charger, when attached to the sensor, was outputing nearly 9v and overwhelming the sensor sending into a reset loop. Could it be because the simple wall chargers have no (or weak) regulation? Insights appreciated.
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