Battery weight a good indicator of quality / capacity ?

This pertains to new batteries only.

I do know that with my D Cells, rechargable or not, (assumed new) as the weight increases so does the capacity.
I mean within the same class. Apples to apples, oranges to oranges (alkalines to alkalines, chemistry to chemistry etc)

Super lightweight D cells have little capacity, and my heaviest D cells do have the highest capacity.

Obviously, the more of the innards there are, the more ions they can pack.

But is weight a reasonably good measure of a new battery’s capacity comparing it to other batteries in the same class?

Not necessarily. I’ve seen some tear-downs of chinese batteries, and many of them are filled with stuff like flour or sugar to increase weight.

Some of them even pack sand in there. Cheaper then flour or sugar

I can’t see flour or sugar being a good choices for weight but sand definitely.

wow! What sneaky turds they can be. I had no idea.

Don’t forget they also filled them with some of that left over contaminated Chinese drywall.

I have taken some ebay cells apart that were given to me as part of a trade.
They felt stupid lightweight. It had “Ultra Fire” on the label. I knew soon as I picked them up they were fakes. Once apart, there was a freaking small capacitor in it! Talk about a scam job.

I keep a small scale and weigh suspect cells. There can be a several gram difference between the scams & authentic cells. One good way to get a idea is get you some quality laptop pulls. Those are unprotected flattops. Compare the weight of them to your “Protecte” “Fire” cells.
Scary stuff out there.
This is why I only buy cells from reputable dealers.

Some what yes. Only if you are dealing with name brands. Its also good if you buy a few cells to see how much they weight compared to each other. If they are the same brand and make you may be able to tell which one has more capacity. BLF members done this with the Basin 26650s to see if they where from the same batches.

The Chinese communist government I hear is really good at throwing propaganda at the Chinese people (who can’t get outside news) and so I wonder if they do this to USA bound stuff more often?

I wish the USA could get back to making more of it’s own stuff.

:weary:

It seems like it’s a whole lot MORE effort to make a crap battery like that than to make a ‘real’ one. But, I ain’t Chinese so what do I know.

Thanks for sharing those pictures CRX.
It never ceases to amaze me the lengths the makers of those go to just to assemble crap. :person_facepalming:

:slight_smile:

Weight is just one factor- look for any anomalies and if you find any, look deeper. There’s no non-destructive way to know what’s in a cell. The only reliable method of knowing what you have is electrically testing the cell, usually done with an analyzing charger :wink:

Phil

I know right why not make the walls thicker of the cells it would be easier then filling the cells with rubbish. lol

Metal costs a whole lot more than sand or trash.

if you order cells from a not fully trusted vendor (trusted, like RMM, and others) or a vendor in China who had no idea what is actually shipped or sold (like many on AliExpress) that is advertised as being an A brand cell, weight certainly is something that can give away if it is fake.
Also when presenting your case to AliExpress or paypal, it is good to be able to show a much lighter cell then the official specs state for example. (I must be really lucky, only the no name or Ultrafire cells I received were poor in terms of low mAh and higher internal resistance, all branded ones tested OK so I have not disputed cells)

Getting a charger that does just a little more then charging (for example, my Littokala Li500 for $15 shipped without adapter) can give you some more info, they may be not all that good at giving you a 100% result on internal resistance and mAh but using the same charger on all cells surely give you a good idea on those things and also over time, since the faults are present in each measuring, a decline in mAh or elevation of internal resistance can be seen easy.
And well for $15 having a quad bay charger capable of charging a lot of different cells is a good deal in itself IMHO
Edit clarified a bit :wink:

“if you order cells from a not fully trusted vendor (like RMM)”

OK, I’m confused. When did RMM become not fully trusted? I’ve ordered from them and always thought they were a first class vendor.
Just asking.

Depends how you read it, he meant the other way.

Don’t feel bad ‘RichardinNC’, I thought the same thing until I reread it 3 or 4 times. :wink:
I think (hopefully), that CRX has the correct answer. :+1: … :wink:

@CRX: Thanks for posting those picts. When Ricflair told about a small capacitor inside an hollow cell i had a hard time to believe it - no offense intended. Such a blatant scam is mind boggling. :open_mouth:

Lol clarified, when posting I was certain it was clear, but well don’t want people reading it several times before getting it, its just that BLFers usually and generally seem rather smart, keen and sharp :wink:

If it is too light, it is definitely weak in all areas. (Talking to you, “UltraFire”, though I’m sure others perpetrate this too, I have at least one light/verified crappy UF*)
If I remember correctly, it is like 20g too light.

But as others pointed out, it’s pretty cheap to add sand, so that doesn’t work.

And a battery that is good but old, will be weak but not weigh any less.

wle.