The-Jack-of-Diamonds
The-Jack-of-Diamonds t1_iu5grgp wrote
Reply to comment by Hydracat45 in LPT: Pick at least 1 day a year to check/replace/remove dying batteries, not just in smoke alarms. Weather radios, older remotes, anywhere they may leak and ruin devices. And recycle, don't toss the old ones. Time change dates are easiest to remember, or set 1 or 2 annual reminders. by Njtotx3
I thought you might be a member of r/flashlight based on your comment here.
The-Jack-of-Diamonds t1_iu5gan9 wrote
Reply to comment by Inveramsay in LPT: Pick at least 1 day a year to check/replace/remove dying batteries, not just in smoke alarms. Weather radios, older remotes, anywhere they may leak and ruin devices. And recycle, don't toss the old ones. Time change dates are easiest to remember, or set 1 or 2 annual reminders. by Njtotx3
Yes you’re right, Amazon also makes their own that have done really well in testing against eneloop.
Basically you should use those, or lithium batteries in anything you care about. I never use Alkaleaks anymore, too much valuable shit ruined by them.
The-Jack-of-Diamonds t1_iu498l1 wrote
Reply to LPT: Pick at least 1 day a year to check/replace/remove dying batteries, not just in smoke alarms. Weather radios, older remotes, anywhere they may leak and ruin devices. And recycle, don't toss the old ones. Time change dates are easiest to remember, or set 1 or 2 annual reminders. by Njtotx3
Don’t use cheap alkaline batteries and you won’t have to ever worry about them leaking again.
Buy some eneloop batteries and a charger, recharge them and save a fortune on batteries in the long run.
The-Jack-of-Diamonds t1_iu5rh2f wrote
Reply to comment by Hydracat45 in LPT: Pick at least 1 day a year to check/replace/remove dying batteries, not just in smoke alarms. Weather radios, older remotes, anywhere they may leak and ruin devices. And recycle, don't toss the old ones. Time change dates are easiest to remember, or set 1 or 2 annual reminders. by Njtotx3
You and me both…