AAA Eneloop vs. "normal" battery
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Hello,
I have some battery based sensors and noticed that they last for about half a year on normal not rechargeable battery but only 2-3 months on eneloops.
What are your experiences? What kind of battery do you use for battery based sensors.
Regards
Stefan
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I have that kind of experience, and, according to my searches, rechargeable batteries are a much less favorable self-discharge curve than regulat batteries. It means that, even at very low current, rechargeable batteries will discharge way faster than alkaline ones.
Here is a source:
http://batteryuniversity.com/learn/article/elevating_self_discharge
The best overall are lithium based (not rechargeable) batteries. Like these ones:
http://www.energizer.com/batteries/energizer-ultimate-lithium-batteries
Qq.
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Alkaline batteries outperform NiMh when the average current draw is ~100mA and less. With half a year battery life the average current is 1000mAh / (6 * 30 * 24) h = 0.23mA which is much less than 100mA.
See http://www.paulallenengineering.com/blog/alkaline-vs-nimh-under-different-loads and http://www.paulallenengineering.com/blog/kirkland-signature-alkaline-batteries
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Hello, I use CR2032 which are more constraining. I think normal alkaline batteries are the best choice if you don't mind the volume.
You should get much more than 6 months of battery life with alkaline batteries, what is your setup ?
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Currently I mostly use Alkaline but on some project I use old handy-lipo-batteries. They are nice since they include some basic safety circuits.
Most of my projects work on 2xAA-Alkaline with 1mhz-AVR .. pretty good experience so far .. even with uses ones.