hello
would any of you want to sell me a used (but in good condition) Orbit or a
Schulze charger?
please contact me directly at [EMAIL PROTECTED]
thanks ...
John,
What?? Are you diabetic?
It's called "recharging", Sirius(ly)
;-)
Chris
Original Message Subject: Re:
[RCSE] EverReady's Answer to the Lithium 1.5 V
CellQuestionFrom: John Erickson
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>Date: Fri, October 27, 2006 3:31
pmTo: Chris Adams <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Chris and Jim,
Will you two please cover the Calvin Cycle next? I sat in on my daughter's
AP Biology class and I swear out of 20 questions on a pre test I got 1
right. Humbling experience when your kids shoot way ahead of your knowledge
level.
Of course she knows very little about downwind turn
In proper terms, the Lithium ion, Li+, is chelated by the "Organic"
compounds. Lithium disulfide and Lithium Sulfide are properly
termed "Inorganic" unless you are from a different planet with
alternate element based Life forms (LOL). As mentioned below, the
propylene carbonate, dioxane, and dime
To confirm my earlier post that lithium was probably a component of the electrolyte and not truly a controlling element of the electrochemical reaction (which determines voltage), I contacted EverReady's help line. They confirmed that the lithium in their AA batteries was part of an "organic
I believe that James is right. There may be some lithium in there
but its not a LiPoly or Lithium Ion chemistry.
I did a quick search of the web and found plenty of info on the
lithium AAs but nothing that discussed the chemistry used.
Rick
At 01:39 PM 10/27/2006, Robert Samuels wrote:
I j
I has to do with design of the cell chemistry, and obviously in
addition to manufacturing, current output, recharging, among other
things.
Take a look at the Li-Fe versus Li - ion chemistry at http://www.powerstream.com/BatteryFAQ.html
Chris
Original Message Subject: [RCSE]
l
That is a great question. Please be sure and share the answer with the
list.
Robert Samuels wrote:
I just bought some lithium AA bateries for use in my digital camera.
They are 1.5 volt cells. I don't understand how they can be 1.5 volts
when lithiums are 3 volts. Can anyone explain it to
Is it possible that what you bought are not lithium polymer, but are lithium alkaline? The fact that lithium is present does not mean that it is the element controlling the voltage of the electrochemical reaction. It could be a simple part of a halide or hydroxide salt that is part of the e
I just bought some lithium AA bateries for use in my digital camera. They
are 1.5 volt cells. I don't understand how they can be 1.5 volts when
lithiums are 3 volts. Can anyone explain it to me?
Robert Samuels ... St. Louis
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