Camera Battery Conservation Tips

March 23rd, 2008

SUMMARY: Make your digital camera batteries last longer. Here’s how.
 
Are you always running out of battery power just before you take that perfect picture with your digital camera? Here are some tips to conserve your batteries when you are out “snapping away”.

1) Turn off your digital camera when not in use. If you are in a situation where you must snap pictures quickly, this may not apply as turning digital cameras on and off take a few seconds, and may cause you to miss a picture-taking opportunity. However, if you are taking a leisurely stroll and can afford a couple of seconds before snapping a still subject, by all means, conserve your digital camera’s energy!

2) Many digital cameras have a regular viewfinder and an LCD viewfinder. While the digital LCD viewfinder has its benefits, it can drain battery power. Turn it off when applicable and use your regular viewfinder for taking pictures.

3) Don’t stop after taking every photo and look at the picture in your digital camera’s playback mode. Granted, you sometimes need to look at photos immediately after shooting them in order to make sure your exposure is correct, the lighting is ok, etc., but doing this does use up your digital camera’s battery power.

4) If you are using MicroDrive media, be forewarned that these miniature hard drives may take up quite more power than Compact Flash cards.

Use these tips and you’ll save some digital camera battery power for when you want to take that perfect picture. But, of course, the best tip to make sure that you don’t run out of power is . . . take some extra charged batteries with you on trips!

BATTERY CHARGING INFORMATION

March 23rd, 2008

Most battery manufacturers recommend to slow charge a new NICAD laptop battery for 24-hours before use. This initial trickle charge helps to redistribute the electrolyte to remedy dry spots on the separator that may appear when the electrolyte gravitates to the bottom of the cell during long storage. A slow charge also helps to bring all the individual cells within a battery pack up to an equal charge level because each cell may have self-discharged to different capacity levels during storage.

Note: Today’s newer NICAD batteries may not this initial charge. Refer to the products documentation for proper charging steps. 

BATTERY CHEMISTRY

March 18th, 2008
NICAD NiMH SLA Li-Ion Li-Polymer Reusable Alkaline
Energy Density
(Wh/kg)
40-60 60-80 30 100 150-200 80 (initial)
Cycle Live
(capacity decrease from 100% to 80%)
1550 500 200-500 500-1000 100-150 10 (to 65%)
Fast charge time 1-1h 2-4h 8-16h 3-4h 8-15h 2-3h
Overcharge tolerance moderate low high very low N/A moderate
Self-discharge per month
(room temperature)
20% 30% 5% 10% N/A 0.3%
Cell voltage
(nominal)
1.25V 1.25V 2V 3.6V 2.7V 1.5V
Load current > 2c 0.5-1C 0.2C 1C or less 0.2C 0.2C
Operating Temperature 040 to +60 C -20 to +60 C -20 to +60 C -20 to +60 C N/A 0 to +65 C
Maintenance requirement
(to obtain max. service live)
30 days 90 days 3 - 6 months not req. not req. not req.
Typical Battery Cost
(Cost by US prices)
$50.00 $70.00 $25.00 $100.00 $90.00 $5.00
In commercial use since 1950 1990 1970 1997 Not released 1992

LI-ION NICAD LI-POLYMER NIMH SLA BATTERIES

March 18th, 2008

LI-ION BATTERIES

(Lithium Ion) fragile technology requiring protector circuit, the Li-ion is used where very high energy density is needed and cost is secondary.

NICAD BATTERIES

(Nickel Cadmium) is a well known and understood battery. The NICAD is used where long life, high discharge rate and economical price are important.

LI-POLYMER

(Lithium Polymer) a potentially lower cost version of the Li-ion under development and has not yet been released to the public.

NIMH BATTERIES

(Nickel -Metal Hydride) provides incremental improvements in capacity over the NICAD at the expense of reduced cycle life and lower load current.

SLA

(Sealed Lead Acid) most economical for larger power applications where weight is of lesser concern.

Types of CMOS batteries

March 15th, 2008

The following is a listing of the types of batteries found in computers to power the CMOS memory. The most common type of battery is the Coin cell battery (Lithium Battery). The coin cell battery is the size of a dime, as shown below.

Life time of a CMOS battery - The standard lifetime of a CMOS battery is around 10 Years; however, this amount of time can change depending on the use and environment that the computer resides.

CMOS ABCs

March 15th, 2008

Also known as a RTC/NVRAM or CMOS RAM, CMOS is short for Complementary Metal-Oxide Semiconductor. CMOS is an on-board semiconductor chip powered by a CMOS battery inside IBM compatible computers that stores information such as the system time and system settings for your computer. A CMOS is similar to the Apple Macintosh computer’s PRAM.

BATTERY ABCs

March 13th, 2008

There are thee main categories of computer batteries:

The first type of battery is the backup battery, which is commonly referred to as the “CMOS battery”. This battery is what holds your computer’s computer settings, such as the time and date. This allows your computer to remember basic computer settings and allows you to boot the computer without entering those settings each time you start the computer. Additional information about CMOS and the CMOS batteries can be found on our CMOS help page.

The second type of battery is the “bridge battery”. This battery is only found within portable computers and is used as a temporary backup for the main battery. This allows you to remove the main battery and replace it with a good battery without having to turn off the computer.

The third type of battery is the main battery. The main battery is also only used with portable computers and is used as an alternate source of power for when the computer is not connected to a standard wall outlet.

Power2Battery.com is a replacement laptop battery company of all types of laptops. We continuously produce many style of laptop batteries to ensure that we get the best replacement batteries for you. Our goal is 100% customer satisfaction. Start saving time and money with Power2Battery.com

Battery Booster Saving power in mobile devices.

March 9th, 2008

Voice transmission and video playback are the biggest power hogs in mobile devices, but skipping some signal-processing tasks could greatly boost battery life without a huge sacrifice in quality. Media files must be decoded during playback, and if a device decoded only 80 percent of the information, it would use only 80 percent as much power. A new technique could cut power consumption even more, says Gang Qu, a computer scientist at the University of Maryland. Peculiarities in coding mean that the processing time–and power–required to decode a block of information varies. Qu and colleagues wrote an algorithm that imposes strict time limits on the decoding process; the decoder skips only the jobs that take too long. In simulations, this approach yielded an 81 percent completion rate but used only 37 percent as much power as decoding everything. Qu says blocks of information requiring longer decoding time may not always be more critical than the rest. high quality replacement laptop battery

Super-Charging Lithium Batteries

March 9th, 2008

Existing lithium batteries can enable battery-powered electrical vehicles to travel hundreds of miles on a charge, prompting a race among major automakers to demonstrate that the batteries are safe and durable enough for mass marketing. Battery developers, meanwhile, continue to push lithium performance. Last month, Stanford University materials scientists unveiled a nanowire electrode that could more than triple lithium batteries’ energy storage capacity and improve their safety.

The development, reported in the scientific journal Nature Nanotechnology, stems from the labs of nanowire innovator Yi Cui and battery expert Robert Huggins at Stanford’s Materials Science and Engineering Department. The researchers show that nanowires of silicon just a few atoms across can function as high-capacity electrodes, absorbing and releasing about 10 times more lithium ions than the graphite electrodes that are commonly used today.

Charging a lithium laptop battery usually means moving lithium ions from the battery’s positive electrode or cathode into its negative electrode or anode. Silicon has the right electrochemical affinity for lithium ions to make it a promising material for anodes. In fact, until now, it has been a bit too promising. Silicon anodes absorb too much lithium. Upon charging, the silicon anodes swell to four times their previous volume, fracturing the material. After just a few charging cycles, the anodes are finished.

Nanowires, in contrast, take the swelling in stride. The Stanford collaborators’ silicon nanowires swell when charged from 89 nanometers wide to 141 nanometers wide and simultaneously elongate, thereby releasing the strain. They show no signs of mechanical failure after more than 20 cycles.

Nor, according to Cui, do the silicon nanowires appear as susceptible as graphite to typical failure mechanisms that cause safety problems (including fires that prompted new rules from the U.S. Department of Transportation this week limiting lithium batteries in checked luggage). “Potentially, silicon is going to be much safer than carbon,” says Cui, who points out that improved safety could be key to lithium’s future acceptance in vehicles. “It only takes an accident or two to destroy a technology.” He says that testing over many more cycles is under way to confirm the silicon-nanowire anode’s enhanced durability and safety. Replacement laptop battery

The downside is that the nanowire growth process that Cui uses, which feeds gaseous silicon to a liquid gold catalyst to make the solid electrode, is a high-temperature (600 to 900 °C) process that could be costly to scale up. Cui believes that scale-up of the vapor-liquid-solid process is nevertheless feasible, but he acknowledges that he is also “exploring another approach.”

Ohio State University chemist Yiying Wu, who also works on nanowire electrodes, calls the Stanford work “definitely very important.” But Wu and other materials scientists caution that additional advances will be required before lithium batteries with nanowire electrodes deliver major increases in performance of electric-vehicle batteries. Not least is the need to scale up the process of making nanowires, which have yet to be mass-produced for commercial application.

Another limitation is that while Cui’s silicon nanowires make great anodes, lithium-battery technology has greater need for improved cathodes. In a given battery, substituting an anode that stores more lithium ions has no impact without a corresponding cathode that can supply more charge.

Both Cui and Wu (who reported his own lithium anode development last month with a high-capacity cobalt-oxide nanowire) say that their labs are working on novel materials for cathodes. “That’s the holy grail for this business,” says Wu. “Anyone who can generate much higher cathode capacity will bring a huge breakthrough for the lithium battery.”

What is mAh?

March 5th, 2008

What does mAh mean when it comes to batteries?
 
mAh stands for Milliamp Hour, a technical term for how much power a particular battery will hold. Digital camera / Power tools / Laptop batteries with higher mAh values theoretically last longer without requiring a recharge, allowing you to take more photographs before you have to replace your batteries.
It is recommended when placing batteries in a digital camera that their mAh values match. Otherwise, it is possible that one lesser mAh battery will drain before the others, causing extra strain on the remaining batteries or causing your digital camera to not work until all batteries are replaced.