Next Gen Oxyride Batteries Coming Soon 249
marksilverman writes "The New York Times is reporting that Panasonic will start selling (Biometric scan required to prove your value as a human being) next generation Oxyride batteries soon. They last twice as long as premium alkaline batteries, they deliver more power, and they're cheaper. They're already popular in Japan. The downside? They have a shorter life in a "rundown test" where you put the batteries in and leave the power on until they're drained. In real-world scenarios (like how many digital pictures you can take) they do really well."
Oxyride Car & Test ... (Score:5, Informative)
Oxyride Test [pcworld.com]
CC.
now please pour VC funds into battery research (Score:2)
Why don't we, for example, have modular batteries for electric cars which could be changed by robotic equipment at service stations where they would be recharged underground? That kind of thing would allow us to cut over from oil to renewable (eg., wind, hydro) power without any innovations in actual battery technology.
I like t
Re:now please pour VC funds into battery research (Score:3, Interesting)
how are they better (Score:2)
Re:how are they better (Score:2)
Ofcourse they are not rechargeable.
Re:how are they better (Score:2)
Re:how are they better (Score:5, Insightful)
No self-discharge.
For most devices that you use infrequently, rechargeable batteries are useless because they drain dead in a couple of months even when not in use.
Re:how are they better (Score:2)
Re:how are they better (Score:2)
Re:how are they better (Score:2)
Re:how are they better (Score:2, Informative)
Re:how are they better (Score:2)
No, wrong. (Score:2, Informative)
Re:how are they better (Score:2)
Re:how are they better (Score:2)
-Jesse
Re:how are they better (Score:3, Informative)
It's sickening how many batteries wind up landfilled every year. NiMH rechargables work really well and are very cheap in quantity. Go check out batteryspace.com - AA's are about $30 per 24 cells. Still more than alkalines, but they outperform alkalines in high draw stuff (what many people use them
Re:how are they better (Score:3, Informative)
-1 Wrong
Nickel-metal hydride does suffer from a memory effect; nickel-cadmium, however, does.
http://science.howstuffworks.com/battery7.htm [howstuffworks.com]
Re:how are they better (Score:3, Interesting)
they both do?
Re:how are they better (Score:5, Informative)
Li-ion, on the other hand, is a very expensive format due to the need for internal circuitry to protect the battery, and as a result it doesn't come in the standard sizes, which can guarantee a high cost as each manufacturer can rip you off for their own format...
For many many applications, NiMH is by far the best way to go.
Biometric what?? (Score:5, Funny)
Not entirely true. I have it on good authority that they'll accept gold bullion as well -- at least on Tuesdays.
Re:Biometric what?? (Score:3, Funny)
No, those are just the bad spellers or bad typers. The idiots are the ones who keep proudly saying "Walla!"
*shudder*
Just a scoop of Oxyride in the wash (Score:5, Funny)
Just watch how it cuts through this stubborn blood stain.
This is a little hard to swallow (Score:5, Funny)
This one's a tougher call. In blind tests, most people couldn't tell any difference between a CD player with Oxyrides and one with regular alkalines. A few identified the Oxyrides as maybe being a bit richer-sounding, but said that the difference was awfully subtle. All participants confessed, though, that they were not members of a Japanese orchestra.
Yeah, I know that battery makers have been struggling to solve the problems of ripple. Puh-leez. What's the next claim? Women who use Oxyrides in their vibrators experience 15% increased intensity in their orgasms?
Hey Panasonic! QUick, better shorten that name to O-Rides.
Re:From the previous paragraph (Score:4, Informative)
As it turns out, the power-boosting effect is no marketing concoction; it's real. In identical flashlights, Oxyrides produce an obviously wider, whiter circle of light than Duracell Ultras. You can immediately tell the difference in portable fans, too, because the Oxyride fan hums at a higher pitch, a musical step higher than the Duracell one. The Oxyrides even make power screwdrivers spin faster: 364 r.p.m., compared with 316 r.p.m. for the Duracell Ultras.
I would venture to guess that if the vibrator doesn't have a power regulator, it'll vibrate faster. If that'll increase the intensity of a woman's orgasm is left as an exercise for the class.
Re:From the previous paragraph (Score:5, Funny)
Re:From the previous paragraph (Score:2, Insightful)
So... these batteries produce out-of-spec voltag
Re:From the previous paragraph (Score:2)
Re:This is a little hard to swallow (Score:5, Funny)
Sounds like the perfect research project for my PhD.
Re:This is a little hard to swallow (Score:2)
Sure you laugh now, but have you seen the Panabrator [panasonic.ca]? I didn't believe it myself when I fist saw it. (Come on! Folks in marketing had fun with that one!)
Ease your tension and massage away stress with Panasonic's Panabrator Portable hand-held massagers.
Truth usually tends to be stranger than fiction.
Re:This is a little hard to swallow (Score:2)
Re:This is a little hard to swallow (Score:2)
Re:This is a little hard to swallow (Score:2)
Re:This is a little hard to swallow (Score:2)
Rechargeable? (Score:5, Insightful)
A good set of NiMH cells does everything I ask of them for a couple years. The exepense of Alkaline cells would be far greater.
Other thought is, now we have in place processes for recycling consumer batteries. What's going to be required for these?
Re:Rechargeable? (Score:2)
Re:Rechargeable? (Score:2)
Re:Rechargeable? (Score:2)
Re:Rechargeable? (Score:2)
Re:Rechargeable? (Score:5, Insightful)
Next up is the fact that they were 1800mh batteries. My budget rechargeables are 2300, up from 2250 the year before.
Plus batteryspace.com [batteryspace.com] regularly has a sale, currently you can get 24 rechargables for $29!!!
Re:Rechargeable? (Score:3, Informative)
Sorry for the confusion.
Density? (Score:2)
sounds engrish (Score:5, Funny)
Re:sounds engrish (Score:2)
Userfriendly? (Score:3, Funny)
they don't last twice as long ... (Score:4, Insightful)
Article writer REALLY DUMB! (Score:3, Insightful)
This is one of the dumbest paragraphs I've seen recently in the (so-called) scientific press.
Is there more current, more voltage, or both? Any of the above is possible from what they say above, and none of these will give you richer sound on your portable music player.
Why not say:
Your battery-operated tooth brush will over-stress its plastic gears.
Flashlights burn out quicker.
Camera flashes let you take more bad family photos quicker than before.
And because you're now using the latest technology, you will even imagine that your portable music player sounds richer than ever.
Then again, who really still expects truth to be found in the NYT?
Re:Article writer REALLY DUMB! (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Article writer REALLY DUMB! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Article writer REALLY DUMB! (Score:2)
Re:Article writer REALLY DUMB! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Article writer REALLY DUMB! (Score:2, Insightful)
NiMH puts out something like 1.2 volts. 1.2 vs 1.7 is starting to be a fairly large spread. My Cannon takes 4 batteries so now we are looking at 4.8 volts vs 6.8 volts. That seems fairly significant.
If I remember correctly Kodak cameras are designed for Lithium Ion or NiMH batteries, Alkaline batteries aren't recommended because they put out too much voltage. This would lead me to believe that these new batteries with even a higher voltage could definately be a problem.
Re:Article writer REALLY DUMB! (Score:2)
Reg-free link (Score:5, Informative)
Done with the help of the NYT Link generator [blogspace.com].
No Registration Needed (Score:3, Informative)
Disposable batteries should be illegal. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Disposable batteries should be illegal. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Disposable batteries should be illegal. (Score:2, Funny)
It's people like you who ruin environmentalism for everyone.
Re:Disposable batteries should be illegal. (Score:3, Insightful)
It used to be that consumer alkaline batteries (AAs etc) hadn mercury, and technically had to be treated as toxic waste. Energizer, Rayovac and Duracell alkalines have been mercury free for almost fifteen years, and are safe to dispose of in the household waste stream. Duracell goes so far as to use non-toxic inks in the printing on the battery.
If you have some battery that was put into a device in China and does not say "Mercury Free", you might have a problem on your hands.
Don't use rechargeables in smoke detectors (Score:2)
Here's a link to one fire department that confirms this. [tinyurl.com]
Toxic? (Score:3, Interesting)
If these new batteries last longer than alkaline, maybe fewer will be sent to the landfill. I wonder how toxic they are compared to alkaline?
Still using disposables (Score:2, Informative)
Good long-lasting Lithiums are good as a backup to keep with you if your rechargables all die on you. They are also good if you go somewhere where you just can't find a place to plug in and recharge.
Hey Slashdot editors / article posters.. (Score:3, Informative)
Reg-free link to article [nytimes.com]
Now we have a "batteries" topic?!? (Score:2)
Now can we please get a Gentoo topic? Ubuntu seems like another good choice.
Article sans registration (Score:2, Redundant)
NYT Article [nytimes.com]
Re: (Score:2)
No Reg Required Link (Score:3, Informative)
Dont forget the NYT Bookmarklet [blogspace.com]
(remove newlines)
"Rundown" test *is* a real-world scenario. (Score:3, Insightful)
Another real-world scenario is using AAs in your Belkin Backup Battery Pack for iPod w/Dock Connector [belkin.com] (who comes up with these names?), which is pretty much the "leave the power on until they're drained" scenario if your on an all-day hike or an intercontinental flight.
Batteries on the march (Score:2, Interesting)
The Cost of Energy [grinzo.com]
Oxyhydroxide? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Oxyhydroxide? (Score:2)
Alkaline versus NiMH (Score:2)
Re:Alkaline versus NiMH (Score:2)
Re:Alkaline versus NiMH (Score:2)
It doesn't say by how much, and it only covers digital cameras. For those, NiMHs are pretty much a no brainer unless you leave the batteries in the camera for months. But high drain or constant drain devices might act differently.
And I don't know how much I trust the author--the article also claims that NiMHs aren'
That's pretty easy, actually (Score:2)
Sure. NiMH batteries will be dead in about a month or so from self-discharge. If the battery is to be used in an application where the current draw is low enough for that to be the dominant factor, then use non-rechargeable lithium batteries (or alkaline, if lithium cells aren't available in that size). Otherwise, use NiMH.
If you're not sure what the current draw of a particular application is, buy some cheap alkalines
Hmm, rechargables non rechargables (Score:2)
So it is nice that these batt
batteries can't cut it anymore (Score:3, Interesting)
I guess there's always the problem of where to get that damn methanol from though...
Yes they can. (Score:3, Interesting)
Lead acid - centuries.
NiCd - couple of hundred years
NiMH - Decades
Li-ion - Just about a decade now.
Next generation - Probably Li-S in a year or two.
Technologies inevitably arrive slower than demand. Fact of life. Demand says "Hey I need X" and someone goes away and makes X.
"Really the next power supply for small electronics will probably be micro fuel cells that are fueled with methanol."
Bet they won't. When you run out of methanol you
Bunny (Score:2, Funny)
claim: "But NiMHs aren't widely available" (Score:3, Informative)
I call BS. I can go to the local wal=mart or other store and find literally walls of NiMH batteries and chargers.
Flashlight bulb life 1/7th (Score:4, Informative)
Re:HUH??? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:HUH??? (Score:2)
Re:HUH??? (Score:3, Informative)
If you do a bunch of power on, power offs to drain the batteries, the new ones are much better.
Don't know the fine sciency details myself, but I do know that when batteries die, they're sometimes not quite dead - I've played my GBA into the ground, left it for a day, and then still got another half hour off of the "dead" batteries.
Essentially it means you want to use these in your digital camera, not your cell phon
Re:HUH??? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:HUH??? (Score:2)
Re:HUH??? (Score:2)
The devices within my sight as I sit at my desk that use their batteries in a rundown fashion.:
1 Wall clock. 2 Watches. 1 Alarm clock. 1 Radio. 5 different electronic toys. 1 Flashlight. 2 Cell phones. 1 Answering machine.
Total: 14.
The devices within my sight that use intermitant high-bursts of
Re:HUH??? (Score:2)
2. You don't keep the radio on all the time
3. You don't used your 5 different electronic toys all the time
4. You don't keep your flashlight on all the time
5. You don't use alkaline batteries in your cellphone
6. I strongly doubt that your answering machine uses batteries, but if it does, it uses and extremely small current except the ocassional periods when it's actually recording.
Re:HUH??? (Score:2)
You don't keep the other devices on all the time, no. But they are still not burst-of-power type devices. When you do use them, you generally use them for a long time. Hours at a time. While I haven't had the opportunity to test these batteries in such devices, after reading the article, I'm led to believe that they do not matc
Re:HUH??? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:HUH??? (Score:3, Funny)
My power source is optimized for trolling.
Power (Score:2)
If these new batteries deliver approx. 4 times as much power when short-circuited then they will use up twice a standard battery's energy in approx. half the time (give or take my complete failure to do the math properly).
Smiley-in-the-moon Syndrome (Score:2)
Re:HUH??? (Score:2)
Dead wrong (Score:2)
Re:HUH??? (Score:2)
Re:New York Times Accounts (Score:2)
Journalist can't do math (Score:5, Informative)
Re:acne (Score:2)
Re:Why, oh why, oh why... (Score:2)
Their Marketroid speak is even better... (Score:5, Informative)
Ok, so let's take a look at those claims:
(A) quicker shooting for your digital photos
--> Well, no. Your digital camera's CCD and processor don't run any quicker on a high battery charge than on a low one.
(B) faster flash recovery
--> Actually, yes, this will; the more current the battery can deliver, the quicker the capacitors will charge up.
(C) faster battery powered toys
--> Depends on how the toy works. If it's an unregulated device that just pulls current directly, sure - but you could get the same results just hot-wiring an extra AA into the circuit.
True story: I used to have an old R/C car that ran on 8 AA batteries. I "fixed" that by hacking into the wiring and adding batteries to the circuit with a separate, modular battery bay from an electronics kit my parents gave me a few years earlier. I took it all the way up to 16 batteries total; at that point, it worked for about 1/2 hour and gave me great speed until something in the control board decided it had had enough.
If on the other hand it uses any sort of a voltage or current regulation system, no, it won't move any faster.
(D) brighter flashlights
Well, sure. See the above on devices that pull what essentially is unregulated current, relying only on the natural resistance of the device to keep it at a reasonable pace. I=V/R; Put in more Volts, even marginally, get more Amps and thus a brighter bulb. Whether it's enough to be really noticeable... well, you can tell the difference between a new and used battery, so sure, I'll assume that you can.
Of course, you'll also cause the bulb to burn out quicker.