So I was thinking I should test and get rid of some 18650 cells.
I have a few cheap ultrafire type cells that test at about 500mah and always have, since new.
My question is two fold:
1. I assume they have not very much in the âinnardsâ dept - not much âbattery stuffâ - which causes the low capacity.
2. I know there are at least 2 battery types - ICR - the least stable, and IMR - less unstable.
Which type are these X-fires likely to be?
Iâm trying to answer the question âShould I keep these things around for low duty use, are they more or less dangerous than say an older Panasonic ICR that has lost some capacity?â
Is it possible that since they are not used much, may have not very much âbattery stuffâ inside, and or the âstuffâ is the more stable type, that they are not all that risky to store?
What do you gain by keeping these around? if you rarely use them or will rarely use them I would suggest recycling them and buying one or two quality cells. No reason to have these around if you can help it.
I have some main lights that use good cells, but I also like to keep other lights around the house for occasional use.
I don;t want to spend the money for âgood cellsâ for these, but I would also like to think the cells I might use, are not dangerous - just low capacityâŚ
My opinion is to throw them all out. They are, most probably, unsafe, have very low Mah to be really useful and are very cheaply replaced with good quality ones.
To put it in perspective, a AA Eneloop has more energy in it than those Ultracraps. Why use a big, potentially unsafe battery, when a smaller safe one does better?
whateverfires can literally be anything.
i would guess icr since many are reclaimed laptop cells with new jackets and contacts to hide the spot welds.
whateverfire and safety are mutually exclusive.
most of the nasty accidents i have seen are caused by some form of whateverfire battery.
hm
it actually turns out i got rid of all those
what i still have left that might be questionable, is old laptop pulls (pink) with no markings, that sometimes get hot in the [liitokala] charger, and do not have a lot of capacity
they probably used to but now they are at like 800 mah
My âruleâ is that even if theyâve got lousy capacity, as long as they donât heat up in the charger, Iâll keep them.
I got âfreeâ cells with a so-so light, and theyâre pitiful, but they donât heat up, so I use them in mumâs lights where she has this habit of just leaving flashlights on overnight (and claiming she doesnât).
This way, if draining them to zero kills them (more), at least Iâm not sacrificing a good cell, but one Iâd be tossing anyway if it so much as looked at me funny.
If they heat up, charging or discharging, theyâre gone.