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MZ-NH1 battery

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sebastianbf

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hello guys.

i'm wondering if the lithium battery of the mz-nh1 has that memory effect thing. I mean: What happens if i charge the battery when there's still some charge on it (let's say half charge). I'm asking this because i'm probably going to buy a mznh1, but i don't think i could buy a spare battery for it. So there are gonna be days that I'll have to charge it when it stills have charge on it. Does this kind of charge ends with a battery with the problem of memory effect , like a NMH battery? or is it true that you can charge lithium batteries while they still have charge? .

Thanks everybody

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Lithium batteries do not suffer from memory effect, but when new, are best conditioned by fully draining and charging the battery a few times. The memory effect is something that was common with old Ni-Cad batteries.

For more information regarding types of batteries and the memory effect, see here

Edited by akijikan
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You shouldn't have too many issues with the Lip-4WM, but I never let them drain fully too often and I always charge them completely.

The NH1 will charge about 85% of the battey in 60 mins or so, but the last 15% takes another two hours. I read somewhere that it is better in the long term if it also completes the trickle charge phase as well.

You can also get info at http://www.batteryuniversity.com/

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If you are going to use it every day then it is best to put it on charge overnight & then take it to use the next day.

Li-ion batteries like to be recharge frequently if they are used regularly. The lower the discharge gets the more damage that happens to the battery, you should get a few years out of it if you chanrge from 30% upto full each time. Constant 0% recharges will give you about 0.5 - 1 year.

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I'd disagree, a battery lasts longer with regular use. It deteriorates faster when it sits unused for long times (Months).

I've read somewhere (but can't find the source right now) that these batteries do have a fixed lifetime (I believe in the region of 3 or 4 years)and that the amount of use they have has little effect on the length of life.

I wonder if this is why my cell phone manual tells me to keep the battery in the fridge if it's not going to be used for a while (suspended animation?!)

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