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Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 31 de enero de 2025
I love this company! This is the second year in a row I have bought batteries from them. Their prices are very reasonable and these batteries last a long time before needing to be recharged. And customer service is outstanding!
MT- San Fran
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 2 de enero de 2025
Great rechargeable batteries - seem to last long before I have to recharge. I really love them.Came super fast. thanks
Diamond Dave
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 4 de diciembre de 2024
Don't hold a charge very well and they don't like the cold. Very over stated ability to be a good trail cam battery, you should be able to do better than me wanting to chuck these in the trash! Have to change out and recharge way to much.
Kurt W.
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 12 de diciembre de 2023
With everything running on AA or AAA batteries I feel every household needs at least 12 of each with a charging station. I am very happy with these batteries as they are perfect for our remotes, the thermostat, flashlights, toys, etc. Also, I bought a bunch for my trail cameras for deer hunting and they worked great! I bought a charging station off of Amazon and the duo works perfect. Very happy!
Alberto M.
Comentado en México el 18 de octubre de 2021
No sirven ni para cosas pequeñas que requieren poca energía
BallroomDJ
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 12 de septiembre de 2013
There are two things to know about rechargeable batteries: how much energy they hold (capacity) and how fast do they lose it just sitting on the shelf (self discharge). As other buyers have noted, the advertised capacity of the Tenergy 2600 batteries is greatly exaggerated. I bought four dozen of them and tested them in groups of four with my Powerex MH-C900 analyzer/charger. After a Break-In charge and then cycling the batteries 4 times, not a single one of them reached even 2000mAh capacity. Most averaged between 1800 and 1900mAh.I haven't had the time to let these sit on the shelf then measure the discharge, but they are not advertised as LSD (low self discharge) like the Tenergy Centura, so I will assume they probably discharge pretty fast. I've read where 2% per day is not uncommon. I'll charge a bunch of these so-called 2600's and wait a few weeks to see how much they've lost. I will report back with my findings.I use rechargeable batteries in my 8 time-lapse cameras, which require a total of 80 AA batteries. These cameras run unattended for several weeks at a time assuming they don't run out of power. Since they are a 2-hour drive from the house, and I am not there to simply change the batteries when they go dead, I look for the greatest capacity I can find. These Tenergy batteries, which are really about 1800 mAh, just aren't suitable for my application. If your application is such that having the batteries go dead is no big deal, and you can just change the batteries when this happens, then these Tenergy batteries may work for you.While these batteries may still be a good bargain for the money if you don't need the higher capacity, I don't like to deal with folks who lie about their product. There's no way they don't know their batteries are far less than advertised. If you need a less expensive battery, I recommend the Energizer 2300, which I have also tested and which consistently exceeds 2200mAh.One last comment. The Powerex MH-C900 is fabulous at recovering "bad" batteries. I've encountered about a half dozen or so (all Tenergy) that other chargers indicated were bad. The MH-C900 recovered them all, even the one that got hot on other chargers! I had a La Crosse BC1000 for a couple of weeks before the dog ate it. I much prefer the MH-C900.
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