flydiver
(flydiver)
9
IR in “general” is decent for getting a picture of health for NiMh. If it’s under 100, they tend to be OK. Once they get over 200 they are going downhill, over 500 is lousy, higher than this is really poor. As IR goes up, current ability goes down, but sometimes capacity will seem to hold up anyway, but ONLY for really low draw.
BUT, IR doesn’t seem to be stable on NiMh. If you cycle a poor one a bunch it goes down. Then use it in a low draw LED for or let it sit awhile and it goes right back up.
I have had some NiMh that pretty consistently show low IR, but they are still lousy batteries. I have no idea why. They are definitely outliers though.
As stated, completely full is 1.4v. Nominal is 1.2v. On a VERY low draw test they will drop to 1.2v or a bit below and hang in until depleted and then drop fast. As you up the current draw the voltage drop is more severe and the capacity will appear as less. HJK’s NiMh draw graphs show this clearly. A really poor battery will fail in minutes if asked for a current draw it cannot supply. I tend to sort my battery quality based on the requirement. I have a bunch of motion controlled LED’s around the house and they are quite happy with batteries that are pretty thrashed, though I do have to charge them more often.
The “blast/zap” treatment works, but I’ve found it temporary at best. Once you need to do that the cell is on it’s last legs. I don’t bother anymore. Good cells are easy to come by.
Old Harborfreight tend to be junk. Lenmar are awful. High capacity Annsmann go downhill fast, as do the pale blue Tenergy. I have some old Rayovac 4.0 (blue and silver wrap) that I cannot believe how well they’ve held up. I use them continually in the motion lights because they are just a tad smaller so less difficult to get in and out.