Ni-MH have a lot more capacity these days so make much more sense.
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Ni-MH have a lot more capacity these days so make much more sense.
I think Aldi batteries are pro'ly okay as my brother bought them quite often after messing around with rechargeables. I wouldn't buy the real cheap, no name brand stuff, as one can feel how much lighter they are, pro'ly don't have the chemical density to last.
What do you mean by 'too fast'.
Mine sit in a camera for months & months on end and are OK.
I did find that the 'ready-to-go' pre-charged ones last better.
On a camera forum years ago the Sony Eneloop (I think that's spelt correctly) were highly rated.
I'm using Varta 'Ready 2 use'.
Colin
The prechaged Ni-MH batteries are low self discharge. The Aldi rechargeable batteries are this style. Around $4 for a pack of four.
The older style Ni-MH batteries would self discharge in around a month.
Aaron
Chevron alkaline from Woollies have been more than good IME. Using AAA, AA and D's in various items from GPS to LED torches for work for a couple of years now. Can't really pick any difference in performance between them and the shiny silver and black ones.
The Chevron 'heavy duty' non-alkaline ones were rubbish and Woollies don't sell them anymore.
All get recycled.
I do have some AA rechargables (that get used in one particular back up GPS) that would be 15 years old at least and they're still OK but only as a backup. (Sony and Accuplus).
Its not practical for me to use rechargeables for everything.
cheers, DL
I use Varta quite a bit - had a set in one of my radios for over a year and they're still going fine and it gets quite a bit of use. While circumstantially the more expensive brands may give slightly better performance, I don't see them as good value for money. I should think the Aldi's, Varta's, etc would all be very similar and maybe only slightly down on performance than others, but heaps cheaper.