chirhone
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When i measured the amperage. I saw -270ma. I must have used wrong polarity but this won't change the value, right? I don't want to try again to avoid any unforseened result. The Dylos has warrantee for only 3 months. Some amazon user reported it as out of order after just 10 months. Maybe surges fry the circuit. If ill buy researcheable 1.2v NiMh batteries to avoid AC surges. I may need 1.2vx7= 8.4v. I think this is better than 1.2v x 8 = 9.6v. I can't find 1.3v rechargeable anymore which is closer to 9v. 1.3vx7 = 9.1v which is in the youtube battery pack feed i shared in earlier message. Do you happen to know any 1.3v NiMh? Any ideas why they lowered the NiCd 1.3v to NiMh 1.2v?Asymptotic said:Read about battery tech at the Battery University. This article delves into battery run-time. Pay attention to the differences between low current draw and high current draw devices.
https://batteryuniversity.com/learn/article/bu_503_how_to_calculate_battery_runtime
270 mA at 6.84V is 1.85 watts.
270 mA is a fairly high current draw for AA alkaline cells, and will provide about 7.4 hours service life at 270 mA continuous demand at 21°C per the Eveready E91 spec sheet.
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There aren't any hard and fast rules that are applied to "all consumer electronics". It comes down to each individual device - operational goals, costs, and what engineering trade-offs are required.
A TV remote design that required battery replacement every 3 months would not be looked favorably upon, but replacing battery cells after 2.5 years of average usage versus every 5 years might not even show up on a reviewer's radar.
For instance, I have an electronic home heating thermostat that must have extremely low current draw inasmuch it only began blinking a "lo battery" warning in 2019, but a pair of Energizer Titanium X91-LR6, AA cells powering it had "use by 2007" expiration dates.