I call BS on this. lithium batteries can catch on fire. Alkaline batteries cannot. and the liquid that alkalines leak is usually easy to clean upStop using alkaline batteries. They are trash regardless of brand. Lithium while more expensive is safer and longer lasting.
lithium primary batteries are very stable and long lasting if you don’t try to recharge them.I call BS on this. lithium batteries can catch on fire. Alkaline batteries cannot. and the liquid that alkalines leak is usually easy to clean up
Ive had numerous iPhone lithium batteries bulge and failNote your cell phones lithium-ion battery seems safe enough to carry in your pocket every day.
Swelling and not holding a charge is a pretty safe way to fail.Ive had numerous iPhone lithium batteries bulge and fail
Non-rechargeable lithium batteries, like Energizer Lithiums are built completely differently. They do not fail and bulge, and they almost never leak since the chemistry and construction is different.Ive had numerous iPhone lithium batteries bulge and fail
Neutral the remaining acid with baking soda and water.They asked for the receipt and the bar code off the packaging (if available) hope that goes not knock me out of getting my 79 dollar label maker replaced. The leak messed up the terminals. they are white acid rusted looking. Lots of white powder. I scratched off as much as I could with an eraser and some 3000 grit set sand paper I had
ummm alkaline batteries do not have acid in them. they have a PH above 7 so they use a solution that is a base not an acid. you need a neutralizer for potassium hydroxide, which is caustic.... so you would need a mild acid solution to return the solution to a PH of 7Neutral the remaining acid with baking soda and water.
NiMH is a suitable alternative to alkaline if you care about fire safety.lithium batteries can catch on fire.
Ive had numerous iPhone lithium batteries bulge and fail
the liquid that alkalines leak is usually easy to clean up
ummm alkaline batteries do not have acid in them. they have a PH above 7 so they use a solution that is a base not an acid. you need a neutralizer for potassium hydroxide, which is caustic.... so you would need a mild acid solution to return the solution to a PH of 7
Yeah, I got interrupted 3x and it morphed to a car battery. SH'sOddly, they would not work in my P-touch label printer. It would not turn on with them. I suspect it is the higher voltage of the lithium batteries (~1.81V unloaded). I have been meaning to test it with oneStop using alkaline batteries. They are trash regardless of brand. Lithium while more expensive is safer and longer lasting.
While that's all fact, being torn apart with pliers and thrown into water is not a typical failure mode of an AA cell. I've stopped using alkalines in anything that would really upset me to lose. I've never had one damage a device yet. I've been reimbursed for battery damage before, but it's a bigger pain in the **** than just changing battery chemistry.
All the white stuff on the inside is aluminum oxide and it is an insulator blocking the flow of electricity between the screw on end cap and the case.Anyone know why the 2 items that had batteries that leaked failed to lower on after I removed the junk from the terminals and dried it out ?
Did the leak short something out ?
Contacts are super clean and even wet sanded and dried.

How long ago was that?When I shipped my damaged flashlight in I received a new one as a warranty exchange
Ive had numerous iPhone lithium batteries bulge and fail
No, this is par for the course on Energizers. Its nice that their customer service is accomodiating but IMO - its not worth the hastle.Must be a bad pack of batteries or something.
I think they are probably worried about Chinese knock-offs wrapped in their clothing, which happens a lot. However, I have had this happen several times with Energizers purchased from Home Depot and Target.And now the games begin. Just completed the phone portion and they are sending me paperwork. They confirmed the batteries are covered and will be replaced. They asked for pictures of the original packaging. I laughted.
Better think twice about that...I used to swear by Duracells, but they are no longer the same, they are notorious leakers, too. Probably worse that the Energizers.The same thing happened to me with some Energizers in an expensive device and I no longer use them except for short-life jobs in cheap equipment. The Energizers are a lot less expensive than Duracells, but the copper tops now only go in my expensive gear and things that my life depends on.
^^^ This right here^^^For any devices that I don’t use almost every day, I take the batteries out and store them with the device, usually in a plastic bag.
Have had way too many devices destroyed by batteries to trust them anymore.
Agreed. Have to treat stuff like I did 40 yrs ago when leaking batteries (used mostly D size back then) were pretty common. Alkaline craze happened and things were pretty good for no leaks for 15-20 years. Lately things have gone back to sketchy and no longer consider any brand trust worthy. Second time the coppertop batteries bit me and ruined another device gave up on being loyal to them. The leakers have all been AA but use those like 90% these days^^^ This right here^^^
My routine now for the last ten years or so.
Inconvenient? Yes, but still worth the effort.