Can I use rechargable batteries in an external flash?












3














I have a Neewer NW670C flash which uses 4 AA batteries. I've been using regular alkaline ones so far because I couldn't get myself to buy rechargable ones yet. However, the flash ate their capacity in no time.



Now I got rechargable ones. Ni-Mh 1.2V 2000mAh. They are fully charged at 1.41V each, yet my flash won't power on. Not one blink, not even the LCD, not a "lo-ba" sign, nothing.



I've tested the regular alkaline batteries which are still able to power the flash (they are on the empty side though): 1.28V per cell. That's less than what my charged Ni-Mh's offer.



With 4 cells combined I'm looking at ~5.12V alkaline (works) vs. ~5.64V Ni-Mh (doesn't work).



Can I not use rechargable batteries inside a flash? Do I need a special type?



Another thing that surprises me is how external flashes tend to not have a 6V DC input. Can anyone explain why that is so? I understand the front power input is for ~230V to directly power the flash (and still requires you to have the batteries to power the circuits etc. of the flash), so that's out.



It'd be so much easier to simply plug a 6V DC power-supply. Why aren't we given such option?










share|improve this question






















  • The best place for information on the subject would be....the manual. What does it say? Ore only LR6-type batteries supported or are HR6 supported as well? As to Another thing that surprises me is how external flashes tend to not have a 6V DC input. Can anyone explain why that is so?: We can't see into why one manufacturer does or does not offer a feature. My personal opinion would be: To have a unique feature for their flagship devices. But no company would ever state this - even if it was true.
    – flolilolilo
    Dec 6 at 12:51












  • @flolilolilo Manual says "Alkaline or Ni-MH are usable".
    – confetti
    Dec 6 at 13:09










  • "Why aren't we given such option?" You are with a "studio" flash. "Speedlights" are made specifically to be portable and untethered to electrical outlets.
    – Michael C
    Dec 6 at 14:35






  • 1




    If the manual says Ni-MH work, then I'd try them one more time, and double check that each battery is inserted in the correct +/- orientation. That wrong orientation is the common reason for AA batteries not working at all. Ni-MH is a bit less volts than alkaline, but when under usage load, the Alkaline fall much lower very quickly, whereas the Ni-MH remain steady at 1.2V for their entire capacity. This is a plus, not a negative.
    – WayneF
    Dec 6 at 15:00








  • 2




    Not only will it work, but it will work better as well. Ni-MH battery has better high current discharge characteristic than alkaline battery and will give you a shorter recovery time.
    – user3528438
    Dec 6 at 17:18
















3














I have a Neewer NW670C flash which uses 4 AA batteries. I've been using regular alkaline ones so far because I couldn't get myself to buy rechargable ones yet. However, the flash ate their capacity in no time.



Now I got rechargable ones. Ni-Mh 1.2V 2000mAh. They are fully charged at 1.41V each, yet my flash won't power on. Not one blink, not even the LCD, not a "lo-ba" sign, nothing.



I've tested the regular alkaline batteries which are still able to power the flash (they are on the empty side though): 1.28V per cell. That's less than what my charged Ni-Mh's offer.



With 4 cells combined I'm looking at ~5.12V alkaline (works) vs. ~5.64V Ni-Mh (doesn't work).



Can I not use rechargable batteries inside a flash? Do I need a special type?



Another thing that surprises me is how external flashes tend to not have a 6V DC input. Can anyone explain why that is so? I understand the front power input is for ~230V to directly power the flash (and still requires you to have the batteries to power the circuits etc. of the flash), so that's out.



It'd be so much easier to simply plug a 6V DC power-supply. Why aren't we given such option?










share|improve this question






















  • The best place for information on the subject would be....the manual. What does it say? Ore only LR6-type batteries supported or are HR6 supported as well? As to Another thing that surprises me is how external flashes tend to not have a 6V DC input. Can anyone explain why that is so?: We can't see into why one manufacturer does or does not offer a feature. My personal opinion would be: To have a unique feature for their flagship devices. But no company would ever state this - even if it was true.
    – flolilolilo
    Dec 6 at 12:51












  • @flolilolilo Manual says "Alkaline or Ni-MH are usable".
    – confetti
    Dec 6 at 13:09










  • "Why aren't we given such option?" You are with a "studio" flash. "Speedlights" are made specifically to be portable and untethered to electrical outlets.
    – Michael C
    Dec 6 at 14:35






  • 1




    If the manual says Ni-MH work, then I'd try them one more time, and double check that each battery is inserted in the correct +/- orientation. That wrong orientation is the common reason for AA batteries not working at all. Ni-MH is a bit less volts than alkaline, but when under usage load, the Alkaline fall much lower very quickly, whereas the Ni-MH remain steady at 1.2V for their entire capacity. This is a plus, not a negative.
    – WayneF
    Dec 6 at 15:00








  • 2




    Not only will it work, but it will work better as well. Ni-MH battery has better high current discharge characteristic than alkaline battery and will give you a shorter recovery time.
    – user3528438
    Dec 6 at 17:18














3












3








3







I have a Neewer NW670C flash which uses 4 AA batteries. I've been using regular alkaline ones so far because I couldn't get myself to buy rechargable ones yet. However, the flash ate their capacity in no time.



Now I got rechargable ones. Ni-Mh 1.2V 2000mAh. They are fully charged at 1.41V each, yet my flash won't power on. Not one blink, not even the LCD, not a "lo-ba" sign, nothing.



I've tested the regular alkaline batteries which are still able to power the flash (they are on the empty side though): 1.28V per cell. That's less than what my charged Ni-Mh's offer.



With 4 cells combined I'm looking at ~5.12V alkaline (works) vs. ~5.64V Ni-Mh (doesn't work).



Can I not use rechargable batteries inside a flash? Do I need a special type?



Another thing that surprises me is how external flashes tend to not have a 6V DC input. Can anyone explain why that is so? I understand the front power input is for ~230V to directly power the flash (and still requires you to have the batteries to power the circuits etc. of the flash), so that's out.



It'd be so much easier to simply plug a 6V DC power-supply. Why aren't we given such option?










share|improve this question













I have a Neewer NW670C flash which uses 4 AA batteries. I've been using regular alkaline ones so far because I couldn't get myself to buy rechargable ones yet. However, the flash ate their capacity in no time.



Now I got rechargable ones. Ni-Mh 1.2V 2000mAh. They are fully charged at 1.41V each, yet my flash won't power on. Not one blink, not even the LCD, not a "lo-ba" sign, nothing.



I've tested the regular alkaline batteries which are still able to power the flash (they are on the empty side though): 1.28V per cell. That's less than what my charged Ni-Mh's offer.



With 4 cells combined I'm looking at ~5.12V alkaline (works) vs. ~5.64V Ni-Mh (doesn't work).



Can I not use rechargable batteries inside a flash? Do I need a special type?



Another thing that surprises me is how external flashes tend to not have a 6V DC input. Can anyone explain why that is so? I understand the front power input is for ~230V to directly power the flash (and still requires you to have the batteries to power the circuits etc. of the flash), so that's out.



It'd be so much easier to simply plug a 6V DC power-supply. Why aren't we given such option?







flash off-camera-flash battery






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Dec 6 at 12:24









confetti

376111




376111












  • The best place for information on the subject would be....the manual. What does it say? Ore only LR6-type batteries supported or are HR6 supported as well? As to Another thing that surprises me is how external flashes tend to not have a 6V DC input. Can anyone explain why that is so?: We can't see into why one manufacturer does or does not offer a feature. My personal opinion would be: To have a unique feature for their flagship devices. But no company would ever state this - even if it was true.
    – flolilolilo
    Dec 6 at 12:51












  • @flolilolilo Manual says "Alkaline or Ni-MH are usable".
    – confetti
    Dec 6 at 13:09










  • "Why aren't we given such option?" You are with a "studio" flash. "Speedlights" are made specifically to be portable and untethered to electrical outlets.
    – Michael C
    Dec 6 at 14:35






  • 1




    If the manual says Ni-MH work, then I'd try them one more time, and double check that each battery is inserted in the correct +/- orientation. That wrong orientation is the common reason for AA batteries not working at all. Ni-MH is a bit less volts than alkaline, but when under usage load, the Alkaline fall much lower very quickly, whereas the Ni-MH remain steady at 1.2V for their entire capacity. This is a plus, not a negative.
    – WayneF
    Dec 6 at 15:00








  • 2




    Not only will it work, but it will work better as well. Ni-MH battery has better high current discharge characteristic than alkaline battery and will give you a shorter recovery time.
    – user3528438
    Dec 6 at 17:18


















  • The best place for information on the subject would be....the manual. What does it say? Ore only LR6-type batteries supported or are HR6 supported as well? As to Another thing that surprises me is how external flashes tend to not have a 6V DC input. Can anyone explain why that is so?: We can't see into why one manufacturer does or does not offer a feature. My personal opinion would be: To have a unique feature for their flagship devices. But no company would ever state this - even if it was true.
    – flolilolilo
    Dec 6 at 12:51












  • @flolilolilo Manual says "Alkaline or Ni-MH are usable".
    – confetti
    Dec 6 at 13:09










  • "Why aren't we given such option?" You are with a "studio" flash. "Speedlights" are made specifically to be portable and untethered to electrical outlets.
    – Michael C
    Dec 6 at 14:35






  • 1




    If the manual says Ni-MH work, then I'd try them one more time, and double check that each battery is inserted in the correct +/- orientation. That wrong orientation is the common reason for AA batteries not working at all. Ni-MH is a bit less volts than alkaline, but when under usage load, the Alkaline fall much lower very quickly, whereas the Ni-MH remain steady at 1.2V for their entire capacity. This is a plus, not a negative.
    – WayneF
    Dec 6 at 15:00








  • 2




    Not only will it work, but it will work better as well. Ni-MH battery has better high current discharge characteristic than alkaline battery and will give you a shorter recovery time.
    – user3528438
    Dec 6 at 17:18
















The best place for information on the subject would be....the manual. What does it say? Ore only LR6-type batteries supported or are HR6 supported as well? As to Another thing that surprises me is how external flashes tend to not have a 6V DC input. Can anyone explain why that is so?: We can't see into why one manufacturer does or does not offer a feature. My personal opinion would be: To have a unique feature for their flagship devices. But no company would ever state this - even if it was true.
– flolilolilo
Dec 6 at 12:51






The best place for information on the subject would be....the manual. What does it say? Ore only LR6-type batteries supported or are HR6 supported as well? As to Another thing that surprises me is how external flashes tend to not have a 6V DC input. Can anyone explain why that is so?: We can't see into why one manufacturer does or does not offer a feature. My personal opinion would be: To have a unique feature for their flagship devices. But no company would ever state this - even if it was true.
– flolilolilo
Dec 6 at 12:51














@flolilolilo Manual says "Alkaline or Ni-MH are usable".
– confetti
Dec 6 at 13:09




@flolilolilo Manual says "Alkaline or Ni-MH are usable".
– confetti
Dec 6 at 13:09












"Why aren't we given such option?" You are with a "studio" flash. "Speedlights" are made specifically to be portable and untethered to electrical outlets.
– Michael C
Dec 6 at 14:35




"Why aren't we given such option?" You are with a "studio" flash. "Speedlights" are made specifically to be portable and untethered to electrical outlets.
– Michael C
Dec 6 at 14:35




1




1




If the manual says Ni-MH work, then I'd try them one more time, and double check that each battery is inserted in the correct +/- orientation. That wrong orientation is the common reason for AA batteries not working at all. Ni-MH is a bit less volts than alkaline, but when under usage load, the Alkaline fall much lower very quickly, whereas the Ni-MH remain steady at 1.2V for their entire capacity. This is a plus, not a negative.
– WayneF
Dec 6 at 15:00






If the manual says Ni-MH work, then I'd try them one more time, and double check that each battery is inserted in the correct +/- orientation. That wrong orientation is the common reason for AA batteries not working at all. Ni-MH is a bit less volts than alkaline, but when under usage load, the Alkaline fall much lower very quickly, whereas the Ni-MH remain steady at 1.2V for their entire capacity. This is a plus, not a negative.
– WayneF
Dec 6 at 15:00






2




2




Not only will it work, but it will work better as well. Ni-MH battery has better high current discharge characteristic than alkaline battery and will give you a shorter recovery time.
– user3528438
Dec 6 at 17:18




Not only will it work, but it will work better as well. Ni-MH battery has better high current discharge characteristic than alkaline battery and will give you a shorter recovery time.
– user3528438
Dec 6 at 17:18










5 Answers
5






active

oldest

votes


















3














Although NiMH are charged at 1.4 or so volts, they quickly drop to 1.2 under load. However, unlike alkalines, they stay around that 1.2 for a long time (this is called a "relatively flat discharge curve").



Alkalines by contrast have a much steeper discharge curve but do present a higher terminal voltage when new.



Either way, your flash seems to be absurdly sensitive to battery terminal voltage. No doubt the reason your flash "uses up" the alkalines so quickly is that they have dropped below the voltage the flash is happy with. There's likely still plenty of energy in them.



Conclusion: Maybe the flash is defective but I bet it's just a poorly designed unit. I have never had a flash that failed to work very well with 4xAA NiMH cells. This includes camera-maker-brand flashes "dedicated" to my camera, other-maker flashes also "dedicated" to my camera, and some "vintage" Vivitars that just do "auto-thyristor" mode with their own sensor.



Aside: I wouldn't trust Ikea brand batteries of any type. Nor any other store brand. Big chain stores pay the real battery manufacturers to wrap their store name on whatever batteries are cheapest this month. otoh I've had absurdly good results from not-nationally-advertised-brand alkalines, and far less leakage than from one of the best-known name brands. Your results may vary.



For NiMH cells, from my experience, I'd try Panasonic (Eneloop or not, your choice, Eneloops are low self-discharge but lower energy storage), Tenergy, or Powerex (Maha). Powerex/Maha also make some of the best NiMH chargers available.






share|improve this answer



















  • 1




    Thank you for your answer. That might very well be it and does explain the quick "use up" time (it's been just ~200 flashes on 1/16 power with new batteries. That's half of what the manual says.). The last point is good too, but I have a decent battery tester and the IKEA ones seem actually nice. I'll get my hands on another flash (same brand and model) soon and will test again with that unit. In addition: The alkaline batteries that the flash considers empty are at ~1.28V/cell, doesn't sound entirely empty to me.
    – confetti
    Dec 6 at 17:26








  • 3




    Worth noting that NiMH batteries are almost without exception the batteries of choice for speedlites. Panasonic Eneloops, particularly, are widely well-regarded as the professional standard. They last longer, recycle much faster than awful alkalines (and can recycle more frequently), they run much cooler, and they're rechargeable! I don't think you'll find even a semi-serious amateur with alkalane batteries in their flashes except perhaps as a secondary backup for emergencies, so they definitely work fine in nearly every speedlite on the market.
    – J...
    Dec 6 at 18:25








  • 1




    Yeah, generally speaking NiMH's flat discharge curve and current handling ability makes it better than alkaline for high-current applications like flash. A unit that doesn't like them is a dud.
    – hobbs
    Dec 6 at 21:20



















3














I use them all of the time in several different hot shoe mount flashes. The only difference I've noticed is that when I put in a set of fresh alkalines, the battery level indicator shows 'full'. When I put in a set of freshly charged NiMH batteries, the indicator does well to show three out of four bars. However, a set of fully charged NiMHs that show three bars will last longer than a set of alkalines that show a full four bars.



The Neewer NW670C is listed as capable of using Alkaline or NiMH batteries. I would start by trying a different set of NiMH batteries from a different source. If you have the capability to test actual battery capacity, my hunch is that your 2000 mAh batteries aren't really 2000 mAh. There are a LOT of cheap NiMH batteries in circulation that have vastly overstated capacities printed on them.






share|improve this answer





















  • I'm aware of the fake-battery situation. Those are from IKEA, quite reputable I'd say. They actually have around 2040mAh according to my charger. I'll try to get my hands on another set though to confirm.
    – confetti
    Dec 6 at 14:48



















2














A 6VDC power supply would actually have to be quite massive (think laptop rather than phone power supply sized), big speedlites can draw several amperes when charging.



There are a few older flashes that, as per the documentation, deprecate the use of rechargeables (eg the Metz 45CT); this should not be an issue with more modern ones.



The most likely cause is contact problems - the rechargeables might be just a bit mechanically shorter than your alkalines, or their contacts might have oxidised (which will cause problems with a high amperage load) - try cleaning the contacts (on the battery and on the flash)






share|improve this answer





















  • The batteries are new, so contacts shouldn't be an issue. I've compared the size and it's the same. As per the PSU, sure I wasn't thinking small, but given that generally AA batteries can't supply more than 4-6A it shouldn't be that much of a problem. Especially since the flash has an internal capacitor I'm sure even a 2A power supply would suffice, at the expense of longer charging times of course.
    – confetti
    Dec 6 at 14:19










  • To the contrary, NiMH can deliver significantly higher current than alkalines. For debugging flashes, a current limited lab supply is golden, can you arrange access to one?
    – rackandboneman
    Dec 6 at 17:09










  • I can, but IIRC it has a maximum output of 24V 2A, so im not sure if that'd suffice or how to connect that to the flash at all. Voltage and Ampere are adjustable and there's a CC/CV switch.
    – confetti
    Dec 6 at 17:21



















1














If anything, rechargables should be better than alkalines because they can deliver more peak power. But that is a problem too, because they could cause a fire. Cheap toys refuse to accept rechargables because it would be unsafe. How do they know ? The + cap of a rechargable is a bit wider than a regular battery, so with a bit of extra plastic around the + of the toy it won't make contact. That extra plastic is there for your safety.



I find NiMH batteries to be unreliable. If you haven't taken good care of them then they won't hold much of a charge and won't deliver much power. A good charger that can do repeated discharge-charge cycles can tell you about the remaining capacity of each cell. One bad cell in a set of 4 can make the whole pack useless. Always bring spares, and spares for your spares.



The older NiMH batteries have a high self discharge, you can't keep them in your bag for many months. The newer low-self-discharge ready-for-use types (Eneloop etc.) have a lower capacity. I have seen failures with both types, or maybe I just need to upgrade to a better charger.



Finally, the discharge curve of rechargable batteries is different from single-use batteries. They hold their voltage longer, but at the end it drops more abruptly. There is little or no warning that they are almost empty, it comes as a surprise. Again, bring spares, even keep a set of fresh alkalines in your bag.






share|improve this answer





























    0














    This is one of the most ignorant answers I have ever written, but I will keep it posted in case it helps somehow.





    In my opinion, it is not about the voltage, but the mAh.



    I only use 2500mAh batteries (1.2V). I tried once 1800mAh(same brand) and they did not work.



    According to my experience then, a 2000MAmp battery is too close to the ones did not work for me. :o(



    I am sorry I can not give any technical explanation, just experience in my case.






    share|improve this answer























    • That's really weird. You're confusing mA (milli-ampere) with mAh (milli-ampere-hours). The 2000/2500/1800mAh gives information about the maximum capacity a battery can hold. mA, or A (ampere) on the other hand gives information about the current the battery can supply, and varies from battery to battery, but should be around 5A max. for short periods of time. So in your case I'm sure there were other factors involved as to why 2500 would work and 1800 doesn't, as this difference only matters for the capacity (and therefore the max. flashes you'd get out of them).
      – confetti
      Dec 6 at 19:10












    • True. I corrected those letters. Although I know my answer is totally ignorant, I will leave it if it helps somehow.
      – Rafael
      Dec 6 at 20:40











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    5 Answers
    5






    active

    oldest

    votes








    5 Answers
    5






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    3














    Although NiMH are charged at 1.4 or so volts, they quickly drop to 1.2 under load. However, unlike alkalines, they stay around that 1.2 for a long time (this is called a "relatively flat discharge curve").



    Alkalines by contrast have a much steeper discharge curve but do present a higher terminal voltage when new.



    Either way, your flash seems to be absurdly sensitive to battery terminal voltage. No doubt the reason your flash "uses up" the alkalines so quickly is that they have dropped below the voltage the flash is happy with. There's likely still plenty of energy in them.



    Conclusion: Maybe the flash is defective but I bet it's just a poorly designed unit. I have never had a flash that failed to work very well with 4xAA NiMH cells. This includes camera-maker-brand flashes "dedicated" to my camera, other-maker flashes also "dedicated" to my camera, and some "vintage" Vivitars that just do "auto-thyristor" mode with their own sensor.



    Aside: I wouldn't trust Ikea brand batteries of any type. Nor any other store brand. Big chain stores pay the real battery manufacturers to wrap their store name on whatever batteries are cheapest this month. otoh I've had absurdly good results from not-nationally-advertised-brand alkalines, and far less leakage than from one of the best-known name brands. Your results may vary.



    For NiMH cells, from my experience, I'd try Panasonic (Eneloop or not, your choice, Eneloops are low self-discharge but lower energy storage), Tenergy, or Powerex (Maha). Powerex/Maha also make some of the best NiMH chargers available.






    share|improve this answer



















    • 1




      Thank you for your answer. That might very well be it and does explain the quick "use up" time (it's been just ~200 flashes on 1/16 power with new batteries. That's half of what the manual says.). The last point is good too, but I have a decent battery tester and the IKEA ones seem actually nice. I'll get my hands on another flash (same brand and model) soon and will test again with that unit. In addition: The alkaline batteries that the flash considers empty are at ~1.28V/cell, doesn't sound entirely empty to me.
      – confetti
      Dec 6 at 17:26








    • 3




      Worth noting that NiMH batteries are almost without exception the batteries of choice for speedlites. Panasonic Eneloops, particularly, are widely well-regarded as the professional standard. They last longer, recycle much faster than awful alkalines (and can recycle more frequently), they run much cooler, and they're rechargeable! I don't think you'll find even a semi-serious amateur with alkalane batteries in their flashes except perhaps as a secondary backup for emergencies, so they definitely work fine in nearly every speedlite on the market.
      – J...
      Dec 6 at 18:25








    • 1




      Yeah, generally speaking NiMH's flat discharge curve and current handling ability makes it better than alkaline for high-current applications like flash. A unit that doesn't like them is a dud.
      – hobbs
      Dec 6 at 21:20
















    3














    Although NiMH are charged at 1.4 or so volts, they quickly drop to 1.2 under load. However, unlike alkalines, they stay around that 1.2 for a long time (this is called a "relatively flat discharge curve").



    Alkalines by contrast have a much steeper discharge curve but do present a higher terminal voltage when new.



    Either way, your flash seems to be absurdly sensitive to battery terminal voltage. No doubt the reason your flash "uses up" the alkalines so quickly is that they have dropped below the voltage the flash is happy with. There's likely still plenty of energy in them.



    Conclusion: Maybe the flash is defective but I bet it's just a poorly designed unit. I have never had a flash that failed to work very well with 4xAA NiMH cells. This includes camera-maker-brand flashes "dedicated" to my camera, other-maker flashes also "dedicated" to my camera, and some "vintage" Vivitars that just do "auto-thyristor" mode with their own sensor.



    Aside: I wouldn't trust Ikea brand batteries of any type. Nor any other store brand. Big chain stores pay the real battery manufacturers to wrap their store name on whatever batteries are cheapest this month. otoh I've had absurdly good results from not-nationally-advertised-brand alkalines, and far less leakage than from one of the best-known name brands. Your results may vary.



    For NiMH cells, from my experience, I'd try Panasonic (Eneloop or not, your choice, Eneloops are low self-discharge but lower energy storage), Tenergy, or Powerex (Maha). Powerex/Maha also make some of the best NiMH chargers available.






    share|improve this answer



















    • 1




      Thank you for your answer. That might very well be it and does explain the quick "use up" time (it's been just ~200 flashes on 1/16 power with new batteries. That's half of what the manual says.). The last point is good too, but I have a decent battery tester and the IKEA ones seem actually nice. I'll get my hands on another flash (same brand and model) soon and will test again with that unit. In addition: The alkaline batteries that the flash considers empty are at ~1.28V/cell, doesn't sound entirely empty to me.
      – confetti
      Dec 6 at 17:26








    • 3




      Worth noting that NiMH batteries are almost without exception the batteries of choice for speedlites. Panasonic Eneloops, particularly, are widely well-regarded as the professional standard. They last longer, recycle much faster than awful alkalines (and can recycle more frequently), they run much cooler, and they're rechargeable! I don't think you'll find even a semi-serious amateur with alkalane batteries in their flashes except perhaps as a secondary backup for emergencies, so they definitely work fine in nearly every speedlite on the market.
      – J...
      Dec 6 at 18:25








    • 1




      Yeah, generally speaking NiMH's flat discharge curve and current handling ability makes it better than alkaline for high-current applications like flash. A unit that doesn't like them is a dud.
      – hobbs
      Dec 6 at 21:20














    3












    3








    3






    Although NiMH are charged at 1.4 or so volts, they quickly drop to 1.2 under load. However, unlike alkalines, they stay around that 1.2 for a long time (this is called a "relatively flat discharge curve").



    Alkalines by contrast have a much steeper discharge curve but do present a higher terminal voltage when new.



    Either way, your flash seems to be absurdly sensitive to battery terminal voltage. No doubt the reason your flash "uses up" the alkalines so quickly is that they have dropped below the voltage the flash is happy with. There's likely still plenty of energy in them.



    Conclusion: Maybe the flash is defective but I bet it's just a poorly designed unit. I have never had a flash that failed to work very well with 4xAA NiMH cells. This includes camera-maker-brand flashes "dedicated" to my camera, other-maker flashes also "dedicated" to my camera, and some "vintage" Vivitars that just do "auto-thyristor" mode with their own sensor.



    Aside: I wouldn't trust Ikea brand batteries of any type. Nor any other store brand. Big chain stores pay the real battery manufacturers to wrap their store name on whatever batteries are cheapest this month. otoh I've had absurdly good results from not-nationally-advertised-brand alkalines, and far less leakage than from one of the best-known name brands. Your results may vary.



    For NiMH cells, from my experience, I'd try Panasonic (Eneloop or not, your choice, Eneloops are low self-discharge but lower energy storage), Tenergy, or Powerex (Maha). Powerex/Maha also make some of the best NiMH chargers available.






    share|improve this answer














    Although NiMH are charged at 1.4 or so volts, they quickly drop to 1.2 under load. However, unlike alkalines, they stay around that 1.2 for a long time (this is called a "relatively flat discharge curve").



    Alkalines by contrast have a much steeper discharge curve but do present a higher terminal voltage when new.



    Either way, your flash seems to be absurdly sensitive to battery terminal voltage. No doubt the reason your flash "uses up" the alkalines so quickly is that they have dropped below the voltage the flash is happy with. There's likely still plenty of energy in them.



    Conclusion: Maybe the flash is defective but I bet it's just a poorly designed unit. I have never had a flash that failed to work very well with 4xAA NiMH cells. This includes camera-maker-brand flashes "dedicated" to my camera, other-maker flashes also "dedicated" to my camera, and some "vintage" Vivitars that just do "auto-thyristor" mode with their own sensor.



    Aside: I wouldn't trust Ikea brand batteries of any type. Nor any other store brand. Big chain stores pay the real battery manufacturers to wrap their store name on whatever batteries are cheapest this month. otoh I've had absurdly good results from not-nationally-advertised-brand alkalines, and far less leakage than from one of the best-known name brands. Your results may vary.



    For NiMH cells, from my experience, I'd try Panasonic (Eneloop or not, your choice, Eneloops are low self-discharge but lower energy storage), Tenergy, or Powerex (Maha). Powerex/Maha also make some of the best NiMH chargers available.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Dec 9 at 22:16

























    answered Dec 6 at 16:45









    Jamie Hanrahan

    1734




    1734








    • 1




      Thank you for your answer. That might very well be it and does explain the quick "use up" time (it's been just ~200 flashes on 1/16 power with new batteries. That's half of what the manual says.). The last point is good too, but I have a decent battery tester and the IKEA ones seem actually nice. I'll get my hands on another flash (same brand and model) soon and will test again with that unit. In addition: The alkaline batteries that the flash considers empty are at ~1.28V/cell, doesn't sound entirely empty to me.
      – confetti
      Dec 6 at 17:26








    • 3




      Worth noting that NiMH batteries are almost without exception the batteries of choice for speedlites. Panasonic Eneloops, particularly, are widely well-regarded as the professional standard. They last longer, recycle much faster than awful alkalines (and can recycle more frequently), they run much cooler, and they're rechargeable! I don't think you'll find even a semi-serious amateur with alkalane batteries in their flashes except perhaps as a secondary backup for emergencies, so they definitely work fine in nearly every speedlite on the market.
      – J...
      Dec 6 at 18:25








    • 1




      Yeah, generally speaking NiMH's flat discharge curve and current handling ability makes it better than alkaline for high-current applications like flash. A unit that doesn't like them is a dud.
      – hobbs
      Dec 6 at 21:20














    • 1




      Thank you for your answer. That might very well be it and does explain the quick "use up" time (it's been just ~200 flashes on 1/16 power with new batteries. That's half of what the manual says.). The last point is good too, but I have a decent battery tester and the IKEA ones seem actually nice. I'll get my hands on another flash (same brand and model) soon and will test again with that unit. In addition: The alkaline batteries that the flash considers empty are at ~1.28V/cell, doesn't sound entirely empty to me.
      – confetti
      Dec 6 at 17:26








    • 3




      Worth noting that NiMH batteries are almost without exception the batteries of choice for speedlites. Panasonic Eneloops, particularly, are widely well-regarded as the professional standard. They last longer, recycle much faster than awful alkalines (and can recycle more frequently), they run much cooler, and they're rechargeable! I don't think you'll find even a semi-serious amateur with alkalane batteries in their flashes except perhaps as a secondary backup for emergencies, so they definitely work fine in nearly every speedlite on the market.
      – J...
      Dec 6 at 18:25








    • 1




      Yeah, generally speaking NiMH's flat discharge curve and current handling ability makes it better than alkaline for high-current applications like flash. A unit that doesn't like them is a dud.
      – hobbs
      Dec 6 at 21:20








    1




    1




    Thank you for your answer. That might very well be it and does explain the quick "use up" time (it's been just ~200 flashes on 1/16 power with new batteries. That's half of what the manual says.). The last point is good too, but I have a decent battery tester and the IKEA ones seem actually nice. I'll get my hands on another flash (same brand and model) soon and will test again with that unit. In addition: The alkaline batteries that the flash considers empty are at ~1.28V/cell, doesn't sound entirely empty to me.
    – confetti
    Dec 6 at 17:26






    Thank you for your answer. That might very well be it and does explain the quick "use up" time (it's been just ~200 flashes on 1/16 power with new batteries. That's half of what the manual says.). The last point is good too, but I have a decent battery tester and the IKEA ones seem actually nice. I'll get my hands on another flash (same brand and model) soon and will test again with that unit. In addition: The alkaline batteries that the flash considers empty are at ~1.28V/cell, doesn't sound entirely empty to me.
    – confetti
    Dec 6 at 17:26






    3




    3




    Worth noting that NiMH batteries are almost without exception the batteries of choice for speedlites. Panasonic Eneloops, particularly, are widely well-regarded as the professional standard. They last longer, recycle much faster than awful alkalines (and can recycle more frequently), they run much cooler, and they're rechargeable! I don't think you'll find even a semi-serious amateur with alkalane batteries in their flashes except perhaps as a secondary backup for emergencies, so they definitely work fine in nearly every speedlite on the market.
    – J...
    Dec 6 at 18:25






    Worth noting that NiMH batteries are almost without exception the batteries of choice for speedlites. Panasonic Eneloops, particularly, are widely well-regarded as the professional standard. They last longer, recycle much faster than awful alkalines (and can recycle more frequently), they run much cooler, and they're rechargeable! I don't think you'll find even a semi-serious amateur with alkalane batteries in their flashes except perhaps as a secondary backup for emergencies, so they definitely work fine in nearly every speedlite on the market.
    – J...
    Dec 6 at 18:25






    1




    1




    Yeah, generally speaking NiMH's flat discharge curve and current handling ability makes it better than alkaline for high-current applications like flash. A unit that doesn't like them is a dud.
    – hobbs
    Dec 6 at 21:20




    Yeah, generally speaking NiMH's flat discharge curve and current handling ability makes it better than alkaline for high-current applications like flash. A unit that doesn't like them is a dud.
    – hobbs
    Dec 6 at 21:20













    3














    I use them all of the time in several different hot shoe mount flashes. The only difference I've noticed is that when I put in a set of fresh alkalines, the battery level indicator shows 'full'. When I put in a set of freshly charged NiMH batteries, the indicator does well to show three out of four bars. However, a set of fully charged NiMHs that show three bars will last longer than a set of alkalines that show a full four bars.



    The Neewer NW670C is listed as capable of using Alkaline or NiMH batteries. I would start by trying a different set of NiMH batteries from a different source. If you have the capability to test actual battery capacity, my hunch is that your 2000 mAh batteries aren't really 2000 mAh. There are a LOT of cheap NiMH batteries in circulation that have vastly overstated capacities printed on them.






    share|improve this answer





















    • I'm aware of the fake-battery situation. Those are from IKEA, quite reputable I'd say. They actually have around 2040mAh according to my charger. I'll try to get my hands on another set though to confirm.
      – confetti
      Dec 6 at 14:48
















    3














    I use them all of the time in several different hot shoe mount flashes. The only difference I've noticed is that when I put in a set of fresh alkalines, the battery level indicator shows 'full'. When I put in a set of freshly charged NiMH batteries, the indicator does well to show three out of four bars. However, a set of fully charged NiMHs that show three bars will last longer than a set of alkalines that show a full four bars.



    The Neewer NW670C is listed as capable of using Alkaline or NiMH batteries. I would start by trying a different set of NiMH batteries from a different source. If you have the capability to test actual battery capacity, my hunch is that your 2000 mAh batteries aren't really 2000 mAh. There are a LOT of cheap NiMH batteries in circulation that have vastly overstated capacities printed on them.






    share|improve this answer





















    • I'm aware of the fake-battery situation. Those are from IKEA, quite reputable I'd say. They actually have around 2040mAh according to my charger. I'll try to get my hands on another set though to confirm.
      – confetti
      Dec 6 at 14:48














    3












    3








    3






    I use them all of the time in several different hot shoe mount flashes. The only difference I've noticed is that when I put in a set of fresh alkalines, the battery level indicator shows 'full'. When I put in a set of freshly charged NiMH batteries, the indicator does well to show three out of four bars. However, a set of fully charged NiMHs that show three bars will last longer than a set of alkalines that show a full four bars.



    The Neewer NW670C is listed as capable of using Alkaline or NiMH batteries. I would start by trying a different set of NiMH batteries from a different source. If you have the capability to test actual battery capacity, my hunch is that your 2000 mAh batteries aren't really 2000 mAh. There are a LOT of cheap NiMH batteries in circulation that have vastly overstated capacities printed on them.






    share|improve this answer












    I use them all of the time in several different hot shoe mount flashes. The only difference I've noticed is that when I put in a set of fresh alkalines, the battery level indicator shows 'full'. When I put in a set of freshly charged NiMH batteries, the indicator does well to show three out of four bars. However, a set of fully charged NiMHs that show three bars will last longer than a set of alkalines that show a full four bars.



    The Neewer NW670C is listed as capable of using Alkaline or NiMH batteries. I would start by trying a different set of NiMH batteries from a different source. If you have the capability to test actual battery capacity, my hunch is that your 2000 mAh batteries aren't really 2000 mAh. There are a LOT of cheap NiMH batteries in circulation that have vastly overstated capacities printed on them.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered Dec 6 at 14:45









    Michael C

    127k7142358




    127k7142358












    • I'm aware of the fake-battery situation. Those are from IKEA, quite reputable I'd say. They actually have around 2040mAh according to my charger. I'll try to get my hands on another set though to confirm.
      – confetti
      Dec 6 at 14:48


















    • I'm aware of the fake-battery situation. Those are from IKEA, quite reputable I'd say. They actually have around 2040mAh according to my charger. I'll try to get my hands on another set though to confirm.
      – confetti
      Dec 6 at 14:48
















    I'm aware of the fake-battery situation. Those are from IKEA, quite reputable I'd say. They actually have around 2040mAh according to my charger. I'll try to get my hands on another set though to confirm.
    – confetti
    Dec 6 at 14:48




    I'm aware of the fake-battery situation. Those are from IKEA, quite reputable I'd say. They actually have around 2040mAh according to my charger. I'll try to get my hands on another set though to confirm.
    – confetti
    Dec 6 at 14:48











    2














    A 6VDC power supply would actually have to be quite massive (think laptop rather than phone power supply sized), big speedlites can draw several amperes when charging.



    There are a few older flashes that, as per the documentation, deprecate the use of rechargeables (eg the Metz 45CT); this should not be an issue with more modern ones.



    The most likely cause is contact problems - the rechargeables might be just a bit mechanically shorter than your alkalines, or their contacts might have oxidised (which will cause problems with a high amperage load) - try cleaning the contacts (on the battery and on the flash)






    share|improve this answer





















    • The batteries are new, so contacts shouldn't be an issue. I've compared the size and it's the same. As per the PSU, sure I wasn't thinking small, but given that generally AA batteries can't supply more than 4-6A it shouldn't be that much of a problem. Especially since the flash has an internal capacitor I'm sure even a 2A power supply would suffice, at the expense of longer charging times of course.
      – confetti
      Dec 6 at 14:19










    • To the contrary, NiMH can deliver significantly higher current than alkalines. For debugging flashes, a current limited lab supply is golden, can you arrange access to one?
      – rackandboneman
      Dec 6 at 17:09










    • I can, but IIRC it has a maximum output of 24V 2A, so im not sure if that'd suffice or how to connect that to the flash at all. Voltage and Ampere are adjustable and there's a CC/CV switch.
      – confetti
      Dec 6 at 17:21
















    2














    A 6VDC power supply would actually have to be quite massive (think laptop rather than phone power supply sized), big speedlites can draw several amperes when charging.



    There are a few older flashes that, as per the documentation, deprecate the use of rechargeables (eg the Metz 45CT); this should not be an issue with more modern ones.



    The most likely cause is contact problems - the rechargeables might be just a bit mechanically shorter than your alkalines, or their contacts might have oxidised (which will cause problems with a high amperage load) - try cleaning the contacts (on the battery and on the flash)






    share|improve this answer





















    • The batteries are new, so contacts shouldn't be an issue. I've compared the size and it's the same. As per the PSU, sure I wasn't thinking small, but given that generally AA batteries can't supply more than 4-6A it shouldn't be that much of a problem. Especially since the flash has an internal capacitor I'm sure even a 2A power supply would suffice, at the expense of longer charging times of course.
      – confetti
      Dec 6 at 14:19










    • To the contrary, NiMH can deliver significantly higher current than alkalines. For debugging flashes, a current limited lab supply is golden, can you arrange access to one?
      – rackandboneman
      Dec 6 at 17:09










    • I can, but IIRC it has a maximum output of 24V 2A, so im not sure if that'd suffice or how to connect that to the flash at all. Voltage and Ampere are adjustable and there's a CC/CV switch.
      – confetti
      Dec 6 at 17:21














    2












    2








    2






    A 6VDC power supply would actually have to be quite massive (think laptop rather than phone power supply sized), big speedlites can draw several amperes when charging.



    There are a few older flashes that, as per the documentation, deprecate the use of rechargeables (eg the Metz 45CT); this should not be an issue with more modern ones.



    The most likely cause is contact problems - the rechargeables might be just a bit mechanically shorter than your alkalines, or their contacts might have oxidised (which will cause problems with a high amperage load) - try cleaning the contacts (on the battery and on the flash)






    share|improve this answer












    A 6VDC power supply would actually have to be quite massive (think laptop rather than phone power supply sized), big speedlites can draw several amperes when charging.



    There are a few older flashes that, as per the documentation, deprecate the use of rechargeables (eg the Metz 45CT); this should not be an issue with more modern ones.



    The most likely cause is contact problems - the rechargeables might be just a bit mechanically shorter than your alkalines, or their contacts might have oxidised (which will cause problems with a high amperage load) - try cleaning the contacts (on the battery and on the flash)







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered Dec 6 at 13:16









    rackandboneman

    1,089310




    1,089310












    • The batteries are new, so contacts shouldn't be an issue. I've compared the size and it's the same. As per the PSU, sure I wasn't thinking small, but given that generally AA batteries can't supply more than 4-6A it shouldn't be that much of a problem. Especially since the flash has an internal capacitor I'm sure even a 2A power supply would suffice, at the expense of longer charging times of course.
      – confetti
      Dec 6 at 14:19










    • To the contrary, NiMH can deliver significantly higher current than alkalines. For debugging flashes, a current limited lab supply is golden, can you arrange access to one?
      – rackandboneman
      Dec 6 at 17:09










    • I can, but IIRC it has a maximum output of 24V 2A, so im not sure if that'd suffice or how to connect that to the flash at all. Voltage and Ampere are adjustable and there's a CC/CV switch.
      – confetti
      Dec 6 at 17:21


















    • The batteries are new, so contacts shouldn't be an issue. I've compared the size and it's the same. As per the PSU, sure I wasn't thinking small, but given that generally AA batteries can't supply more than 4-6A it shouldn't be that much of a problem. Especially since the flash has an internal capacitor I'm sure even a 2A power supply would suffice, at the expense of longer charging times of course.
      – confetti
      Dec 6 at 14:19










    • To the contrary, NiMH can deliver significantly higher current than alkalines. For debugging flashes, a current limited lab supply is golden, can you arrange access to one?
      – rackandboneman
      Dec 6 at 17:09










    • I can, but IIRC it has a maximum output of 24V 2A, so im not sure if that'd suffice or how to connect that to the flash at all. Voltage and Ampere are adjustable and there's a CC/CV switch.
      – confetti
      Dec 6 at 17:21
















    The batteries are new, so contacts shouldn't be an issue. I've compared the size and it's the same. As per the PSU, sure I wasn't thinking small, but given that generally AA batteries can't supply more than 4-6A it shouldn't be that much of a problem. Especially since the flash has an internal capacitor I'm sure even a 2A power supply would suffice, at the expense of longer charging times of course.
    – confetti
    Dec 6 at 14:19




    The batteries are new, so contacts shouldn't be an issue. I've compared the size and it's the same. As per the PSU, sure I wasn't thinking small, but given that generally AA batteries can't supply more than 4-6A it shouldn't be that much of a problem. Especially since the flash has an internal capacitor I'm sure even a 2A power supply would suffice, at the expense of longer charging times of course.
    – confetti
    Dec 6 at 14:19












    To the contrary, NiMH can deliver significantly higher current than alkalines. For debugging flashes, a current limited lab supply is golden, can you arrange access to one?
    – rackandboneman
    Dec 6 at 17:09




    To the contrary, NiMH can deliver significantly higher current than alkalines. For debugging flashes, a current limited lab supply is golden, can you arrange access to one?
    – rackandboneman
    Dec 6 at 17:09












    I can, but IIRC it has a maximum output of 24V 2A, so im not sure if that'd suffice or how to connect that to the flash at all. Voltage and Ampere are adjustable and there's a CC/CV switch.
    – confetti
    Dec 6 at 17:21




    I can, but IIRC it has a maximum output of 24V 2A, so im not sure if that'd suffice or how to connect that to the flash at all. Voltage and Ampere are adjustable and there's a CC/CV switch.
    – confetti
    Dec 6 at 17:21











    1














    If anything, rechargables should be better than alkalines because they can deliver more peak power. But that is a problem too, because they could cause a fire. Cheap toys refuse to accept rechargables because it would be unsafe. How do they know ? The + cap of a rechargable is a bit wider than a regular battery, so with a bit of extra plastic around the + of the toy it won't make contact. That extra plastic is there for your safety.



    I find NiMH batteries to be unreliable. If you haven't taken good care of them then they won't hold much of a charge and won't deliver much power. A good charger that can do repeated discharge-charge cycles can tell you about the remaining capacity of each cell. One bad cell in a set of 4 can make the whole pack useless. Always bring spares, and spares for your spares.



    The older NiMH batteries have a high self discharge, you can't keep them in your bag for many months. The newer low-self-discharge ready-for-use types (Eneloop etc.) have a lower capacity. I have seen failures with both types, or maybe I just need to upgrade to a better charger.



    Finally, the discharge curve of rechargable batteries is different from single-use batteries. They hold their voltage longer, but at the end it drops more abruptly. There is little or no warning that they are almost empty, it comes as a surprise. Again, bring spares, even keep a set of fresh alkalines in your bag.






    share|improve this answer


























      1














      If anything, rechargables should be better than alkalines because they can deliver more peak power. But that is a problem too, because they could cause a fire. Cheap toys refuse to accept rechargables because it would be unsafe. How do they know ? The + cap of a rechargable is a bit wider than a regular battery, so with a bit of extra plastic around the + of the toy it won't make contact. That extra plastic is there for your safety.



      I find NiMH batteries to be unreliable. If you haven't taken good care of them then they won't hold much of a charge and won't deliver much power. A good charger that can do repeated discharge-charge cycles can tell you about the remaining capacity of each cell. One bad cell in a set of 4 can make the whole pack useless. Always bring spares, and spares for your spares.



      The older NiMH batteries have a high self discharge, you can't keep them in your bag for many months. The newer low-self-discharge ready-for-use types (Eneloop etc.) have a lower capacity. I have seen failures with both types, or maybe I just need to upgrade to a better charger.



      Finally, the discharge curve of rechargable batteries is different from single-use batteries. They hold their voltage longer, but at the end it drops more abruptly. There is little or no warning that they are almost empty, it comes as a surprise. Again, bring spares, even keep a set of fresh alkalines in your bag.






      share|improve this answer
























        1












        1








        1






        If anything, rechargables should be better than alkalines because they can deliver more peak power. But that is a problem too, because they could cause a fire. Cheap toys refuse to accept rechargables because it would be unsafe. How do they know ? The + cap of a rechargable is a bit wider than a regular battery, so with a bit of extra plastic around the + of the toy it won't make contact. That extra plastic is there for your safety.



        I find NiMH batteries to be unreliable. If you haven't taken good care of them then they won't hold much of a charge and won't deliver much power. A good charger that can do repeated discharge-charge cycles can tell you about the remaining capacity of each cell. One bad cell in a set of 4 can make the whole pack useless. Always bring spares, and spares for your spares.



        The older NiMH batteries have a high self discharge, you can't keep them in your bag for many months. The newer low-self-discharge ready-for-use types (Eneloop etc.) have a lower capacity. I have seen failures with both types, or maybe I just need to upgrade to a better charger.



        Finally, the discharge curve of rechargable batteries is different from single-use batteries. They hold their voltage longer, but at the end it drops more abruptly. There is little or no warning that they are almost empty, it comes as a surprise. Again, bring spares, even keep a set of fresh alkalines in your bag.






        share|improve this answer












        If anything, rechargables should be better than alkalines because they can deliver more peak power. But that is a problem too, because they could cause a fire. Cheap toys refuse to accept rechargables because it would be unsafe. How do they know ? The + cap of a rechargable is a bit wider than a regular battery, so with a bit of extra plastic around the + of the toy it won't make contact. That extra plastic is there for your safety.



        I find NiMH batteries to be unreliable. If you haven't taken good care of them then they won't hold much of a charge and won't deliver much power. A good charger that can do repeated discharge-charge cycles can tell you about the remaining capacity of each cell. One bad cell in a set of 4 can make the whole pack useless. Always bring spares, and spares for your spares.



        The older NiMH batteries have a high self discharge, you can't keep them in your bag for many months. The newer low-self-discharge ready-for-use types (Eneloop etc.) have a lower capacity. I have seen failures with both types, or maybe I just need to upgrade to a better charger.



        Finally, the discharge curve of rechargable batteries is different from single-use batteries. They hold their voltage longer, but at the end it drops more abruptly. There is little or no warning that they are almost empty, it comes as a surprise. Again, bring spares, even keep a set of fresh alkalines in your bag.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Dec 7 at 8:28









        StessenJ

        1571




        1571























            0














            This is one of the most ignorant answers I have ever written, but I will keep it posted in case it helps somehow.





            In my opinion, it is not about the voltage, but the mAh.



            I only use 2500mAh batteries (1.2V). I tried once 1800mAh(same brand) and they did not work.



            According to my experience then, a 2000MAmp battery is too close to the ones did not work for me. :o(



            I am sorry I can not give any technical explanation, just experience in my case.






            share|improve this answer























            • That's really weird. You're confusing mA (milli-ampere) with mAh (milli-ampere-hours). The 2000/2500/1800mAh gives information about the maximum capacity a battery can hold. mA, or A (ampere) on the other hand gives information about the current the battery can supply, and varies from battery to battery, but should be around 5A max. for short periods of time. So in your case I'm sure there were other factors involved as to why 2500 would work and 1800 doesn't, as this difference only matters for the capacity (and therefore the max. flashes you'd get out of them).
              – confetti
              Dec 6 at 19:10












            • True. I corrected those letters. Although I know my answer is totally ignorant, I will leave it if it helps somehow.
              – Rafael
              Dec 6 at 20:40
















            0














            This is one of the most ignorant answers I have ever written, but I will keep it posted in case it helps somehow.





            In my opinion, it is not about the voltage, but the mAh.



            I only use 2500mAh batteries (1.2V). I tried once 1800mAh(same brand) and they did not work.



            According to my experience then, a 2000MAmp battery is too close to the ones did not work for me. :o(



            I am sorry I can not give any technical explanation, just experience in my case.






            share|improve this answer























            • That's really weird. You're confusing mA (milli-ampere) with mAh (milli-ampere-hours). The 2000/2500/1800mAh gives information about the maximum capacity a battery can hold. mA, or A (ampere) on the other hand gives information about the current the battery can supply, and varies from battery to battery, but should be around 5A max. for short periods of time. So in your case I'm sure there were other factors involved as to why 2500 would work and 1800 doesn't, as this difference only matters for the capacity (and therefore the max. flashes you'd get out of them).
              – confetti
              Dec 6 at 19:10












            • True. I corrected those letters. Although I know my answer is totally ignorant, I will leave it if it helps somehow.
              – Rafael
              Dec 6 at 20:40














            0












            0








            0






            This is one of the most ignorant answers I have ever written, but I will keep it posted in case it helps somehow.





            In my opinion, it is not about the voltage, but the mAh.



            I only use 2500mAh batteries (1.2V). I tried once 1800mAh(same brand) and they did not work.



            According to my experience then, a 2000MAmp battery is too close to the ones did not work for me. :o(



            I am sorry I can not give any technical explanation, just experience in my case.






            share|improve this answer














            This is one of the most ignorant answers I have ever written, but I will keep it posted in case it helps somehow.





            In my opinion, it is not about the voltage, but the mAh.



            I only use 2500mAh batteries (1.2V). I tried once 1800mAh(same brand) and they did not work.



            According to my experience then, a 2000MAmp battery is too close to the ones did not work for me. :o(



            I am sorry I can not give any technical explanation, just experience in my case.







            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited Dec 6 at 20:39

























            answered Dec 6 at 18:40









            Rafael

            13.4k12141




            13.4k12141












            • That's really weird. You're confusing mA (milli-ampere) with mAh (milli-ampere-hours). The 2000/2500/1800mAh gives information about the maximum capacity a battery can hold. mA, or A (ampere) on the other hand gives information about the current the battery can supply, and varies from battery to battery, but should be around 5A max. for short periods of time. So in your case I'm sure there were other factors involved as to why 2500 would work and 1800 doesn't, as this difference only matters for the capacity (and therefore the max. flashes you'd get out of them).
              – confetti
              Dec 6 at 19:10












            • True. I corrected those letters. Although I know my answer is totally ignorant, I will leave it if it helps somehow.
              – Rafael
              Dec 6 at 20:40


















            • That's really weird. You're confusing mA (milli-ampere) with mAh (milli-ampere-hours). The 2000/2500/1800mAh gives information about the maximum capacity a battery can hold. mA, or A (ampere) on the other hand gives information about the current the battery can supply, and varies from battery to battery, but should be around 5A max. for short periods of time. So in your case I'm sure there were other factors involved as to why 2500 would work and 1800 doesn't, as this difference only matters for the capacity (and therefore the max. flashes you'd get out of them).
              – confetti
              Dec 6 at 19:10












            • True. I corrected those letters. Although I know my answer is totally ignorant, I will leave it if it helps somehow.
              – Rafael
              Dec 6 at 20:40
















            That's really weird. You're confusing mA (milli-ampere) with mAh (milli-ampere-hours). The 2000/2500/1800mAh gives information about the maximum capacity a battery can hold. mA, or A (ampere) on the other hand gives information about the current the battery can supply, and varies from battery to battery, but should be around 5A max. for short periods of time. So in your case I'm sure there were other factors involved as to why 2500 would work and 1800 doesn't, as this difference only matters for the capacity (and therefore the max. flashes you'd get out of them).
            – confetti
            Dec 6 at 19:10






            That's really weird. You're confusing mA (milli-ampere) with mAh (milli-ampere-hours). The 2000/2500/1800mAh gives information about the maximum capacity a battery can hold. mA, or A (ampere) on the other hand gives information about the current the battery can supply, and varies from battery to battery, but should be around 5A max. for short periods of time. So in your case I'm sure there were other factors involved as to why 2500 would work and 1800 doesn't, as this difference only matters for the capacity (and therefore the max. flashes you'd get out of them).
            – confetti
            Dec 6 at 19:10














            True. I corrected those letters. Although I know my answer is totally ignorant, I will leave it if it helps somehow.
            – Rafael
            Dec 6 at 20:40




            True. I corrected those letters. Although I know my answer is totally ignorant, I will leave it if it helps somehow.
            – Rafael
            Dec 6 at 20:40


















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