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  3. What batteries is best to use for a sensor that sleeps most of the time?

What batteries is best to use for a sensor that sleeps most of the time?

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  • Cliff KarlssonC Offline
    Cliff KarlssonC Offline
    Cliff Karlsson
    wrote on last edited by
    #1

    I am planning to build a couple of sensors that will be used for example reporting temperature every 15th minute, reacting to a button and maybee one in my mailbox lid that would use a accelerometer/compass/pir or similar to react to lid opening.

    All of these functions I guess would only require the arduino to be awake for a minimal time every day. What kind of batteries would be best to use for having as long battery time as possible? Li-po,Li-Ion or any other?

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    • sundberg84S Offline
      sundberg84S Offline
      sundberg84
      Hardware Contributor
      wrote on last edited by
      #2

      I use standard 2xaa and think i will be online between 9-12 months. Report every 15min. There is many threads in this forum about this.

      Controller: Proxmox VM - Home Assistant
      MySensors GW: Arduino Uno - W5100 Ethernet, Gw Shield Nrf24l01+ 2,4Ghz
      MySensors GW: Arduino Uno - Gw Shield RFM69, 433mhz
      RFLink GW - Arduino Mega + RFLink Shield, 433mhz

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      • scalzS Offline
        scalzS Offline
        scalz
        Hardware Contributor
        wrote on last edited by scalz
        #3

        I agree too. I prefer 2xaa or 2xaaa. coin cell is not very good for discharge rate and does not support well high power consumption. Lipo are best, but I am little afraid of burning stories even if it is usually with bad quality lipos. but I am not expert...just my point of view.

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        • Cliff KarlssonC Offline
          Cliff KarlssonC Offline
          Cliff Karlsson
          wrote on last edited by
          #4

          ok, but what kind of battery technology regular, nimh or nimh2? I noticed that rechargeble aa batteries is 1.2V vs ordinary 1.5V

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          • scalzS Offline
            scalzS Offline
            scalz
            Hardware Contributor
            wrote on last edited by
            #5

            I think I would prefer the regular alkaline. It depends of your application too. But if you are interested, here some links:
            http://lenpenzo.com/blog/id710-why-rechargeable-batteries-are-rarely-cost-effective.html
            http://www.greenbatteries.com/battery-myths-vs-battery-facts-1/
            http://michaelbluejay.com/batteries/rechargeable.html
            and there are lot of others links. it is very basic explanations, but if it can help you in your choice...

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            • bjornhallbergB Offline
              bjornhallbergB Offline
              bjornhallberg
              Hero Member
              wrote on last edited by
              #6

              Another vote for AA/AAA. I have one motion sensor node that has survived outdoors for almost a year now on the same pair of AA, and it doesn't even have a regulator ... it surprised me a lot. Go for alkaline. Low self discharge nimh may be better, but they cost a lot.

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              • NeverDieN Offline
                NeverDieN Offline
                NeverDie
                Hero Member
                wrote on last edited by NeverDie
                #7

                Disposable lithium AA batteries (AFAIK much safer than the rechargeable) would last longer than disposable Alkaline batteries in a high drain scenario. Does it confer any significant advantage in the very low current scenarios that would characterize a MySensor? IIRC, the answer is "some but not much."

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                • Andy PepA Offline
                  Andy PepA Offline
                  Andy Pep
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #8

                  i use 2cell 7.4 volt recycled laptop battery packs for my projects thay have a natural discharge of 5% a month but do some reading and research on how to handle and charge them...and you should be fine..plus recycleing lappy batterys is good for the enviroment..and you also learn about the new breed of batterys and cells :)

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