Panasonic BK-3MCCA16FA eneloop AA 2100 Cycle Ni-MH Pre-Charged Rechargeable Batteries, (package includes 16AA blue or 16AA white)
$47.00
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Recharge up to 2100 times Maintain up to 70% of their charge after 10 years (when not it use) 2000mAh type, 1900mAh min, Ni-MH pre-charged rechargeable battery Pre-Charged at the factory using solar power and ready to use No memory effect – batteries can be recharged when fully, or partially discharged
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- Reviews (10)
Description
Product information
Product Dimensions | 1.2 x 7.63 x 4.25 inches |
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Item Weight | 15.2 ounces |
Domestic Shipping | Item can be shipped within U.S. |
International Shipping | This item can be shipped to select countries outside of the U.S. Learn More |
ASIN | B00JHKSN4O |
UNSPSC Code | 26111701 |
Item model number | BK-3MCCA16FA |
Batteries | 16 AA batteries required. (included) |
Customer Reviews |
4,659 ratings 4.8 out of 5 stars |
Best Sellers Rank | #8,741 in Health & Household (See Top 100 in Health & Household) #53 in AA Batteries |
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
Date First Available | April 11, 2014 |
Department | Electronics |
Manufacturer | Panasonic |
Country of Origin | USA |
Warranty & Support
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Additional information
Product Dimensions | 1.2 x 7.63 x 4.25 inches |
---|---|
Item Weight | 15.2 ounces |
Domestic Shipping | Item can be shipped within U.S. |
International Shipping | This item can be shipped to select countries outside of the U.S. Learn More |
ASIN | B00JHKSN4O |
UNSPSC Code | 26111701 |
Item model number | BK-3MCCA16FA |
Batteries | 16 AA batteries required. (included) |
Customer Reviews | /* * Fix for UDP-1061. Average customer reviews has a small extra line on hover * https://omni-grok.amazon.com/xref/src/appgroup/websiteTemplates/retail/SoftlinesDetailPageAssets/udp-intl-lock/src/legacy.css?indexName=WebsiteTemplates#40 */ .noUnderline a:hover { text-decoration: none; } 4.8 out of 5 stars 4,659 ratings P.when('A', 'ready').execute(function(A) { A.declarative('acrLink-click-metrics', 'click', { "allowLinkDefault" : true }, function(event){ if(window.ue) { ue.count("acrLinkClickCount", (ue.count("acrLinkClickCount"), 0) + 1); } }); }); P.when('A', 'cf').execute(function(A) { A.declarative('acrStarsLink-click-metrics', 'click', { "allowLinkDefault" : true }, function(event){ if(window.ue) { ue.count("acrStarsLinkWithPopoverClickCount", (ue.count("acrStarsLinkWithPopoverClickCount"), 0) + 1); } }); }); 4.8 out of 5 stars |
Best Sellers Rank | #8,741 in Health & Household (See Top 100 in Health & Household) #53 in AA Batteries |
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
Date First Available | April 11, 2014 |
Department | Electronics |
Manufacturer | Panasonic |
Country of Origin | USA |
Leif –
I started using the Eneloops about 3-4 years ago on the recommendation of Steve Harris who tested these extensively along with a lot of other brands. My experience aligns with his results… these last a long time and charge quickly. I have had no failures and I’ve bought at least 4 multi packs of 8-16 batteries each (3x AA and 1x AAA). We’ve got three kids and two Xboxes in the house plus tv remotes, drones and remotes, RC cars, etc. In the often used Xbox controllers they last usually two weeks plus of heavy use.They are a bit pricey, but have heard too many folks have issues with the Amazon rechargeables, and in an emergency I can count on these. (I do keep a mega pack on the Energizers in AA that have a 10 year shelf life too… redundancy is the goal, two is one, one is none!)
Phil Boyd Studge –
1. Get a good ‘smart charger’. At a minimum, one that charges each battery independently.2. Avoid using the ‘quick-charge’ setting. Heat is BAD!3. Longevity improves when the recently charged battery has a few hours to rest.4. It is advantageous to re-charge the battery sooner — rather than running it all the way down.5. It is tempting to charge the battery twice to ‘get as much in there as you can’ — Do Not Do This.6. Regularly examine the terminals on your charger and battery powered devices for . . . anything amiss or odd.Nothing is perfect — but these are pretty close.
RC Beach Flyer –
The media could not be loaded. Â I was originally skeptical about these batteries, having lived through the horror of rechargeables in the 80s and 90s that worked fine out of the charger, but couldn’t hold a charge for more than a day. I’ve been using these batteries for about 3 years now and they work out of the charger and stored in your bag for months and months. All the batts from my original purchase are still working fine but I needed to boost my supply after loosing a couple of sets of 4. These are extremely cost effective for high drainage devices like MP3 recorders, cameras and flashlights. The extra plus is that they will not leak if you leave them in your flashlight for a year, like my alkaline batteries did. From now on, only using these in my flashlights. Out of a box of 16, all arrived charged and ready to go. A great investment in power and the longevity of your devices.
T. Burriss –
Eneloops are rugged and reliable. They don’t pack quite as many volts as a non-rechargeable, but no problem for me. There are many reasons to use rechargeable batteries, however you may not save much money. One Eneloop AA battery is roughly $2.50, while a non-rechargeable AA is 32 cents (in bulk). Therefore an Eneloop is paid-up only after being recharged 8 times. Thereafter you’re saving 32 cents per charge, and to pay for the $25 charger, you will have to recharge 79 paid-up Eneloops. The charging cost of electricity is probably trivial. However, by using a rechargeable battery, you are not tossing used-up batteries into a landfill, and besides there is an odd satisfaction from using these things – and it’s hard to price that. Just get them.
M AltafM Altaf –
i was introduced to these batteries back in 2011 and I have been using them since. I decided to purchase these new gen 16 pack eneloops and I am not disappointed. Long lasting batteries come charged a little over half out the box ready to use. I use them for flashlights and Roku because they are my high drain devicec. I added a photo to my batteries with the box I use to store them. Great way to keep track of old and new batteries. Also the upside down means that they are not charged and right side up means that they are fully charged. Worth the buy
C.T. –
I’ve been using Eneloop batteries since they were made by Sanyo. Even those batteries still work great and last forever, these Panasonic versions are no different. Great shelf life and the batteries themselves last a good while. Charging isn’t particularly fast but if you put batteries in place before going to bed, they’re ready to go in the morning.The only gripe I have is probably more with the device than the batteries but our thermostats run off of 2 AA batteries and it does not recognize these Eneloop batteries. If I put some in fresh off the charger it acts like it needs new batteries immediately. Put two Alkalines in and it works fine. I’ve never seen that before and it’s a very minor thing.
Andy SowardsAndy Sowards –
I just picked up another pack of these bad boys since they were on sale, and I needed some more.If you can catch these on sale (even not on sale) they are the best value in rechargeable batteries hands down – I love them, use them in everything, and i’ve used them for years, i’ve yet to have a single one die yet.I recommend the official charger for them, that is what i’d been using. I use these in clocks, gaming controllers, different gadgets around the house, can never have too many ready to go with a chargethey only take a few hours to recharge anyway but I like being able to put fresh ones in as soon as something runs out of batteries.You won’t regret this purchase, start getting these, save money over the years by not buying trash disposable batteries
Alex –
I looked at so many discharge voltage curves and other battery chemical types before I settled on these. I use them for my Oculus Quest 2, Yale door locks, and a few other thingsThey have a lower voltage than disposable alkaline batteries but maintain their voltage better. They don’t last as long as disposable ones but it doesn’t matter because you can quickly recharge theseHow they behave in the Quest 2 controllers: They only read at about 90% at first and quickly fall to 60%. They remain at 60% for quite a while before falling slowly to 50% and then lower. They last a long time so just don’t be scared when you see your controllers are only at 80% after an hour of use, that’s how NiMh batteries workDesign: I know this is a dumb thing but I love the clean design on these. They look so futuristic and make me not hate to use AA and AAA batteries in the world of Li-Ion rechargables
hotdog12 –
Since I live in Houston, I’m always prepared for emergency power outages from tropical storms, floods, hurricanes or winter freezes. After Hurricane Ike I bought a big stash of name brand alkaline batteries to power devices. Sitting unused on a shelf for a year, about 50% leaked corrosive crud everywhere; by the second year almost all the expensive alkalines had failed. I decided to go 100% Eneloops–good decision!I’ve been using Eneloops in everything for years. You can find “D” and “C” cell adapters that incorporate the “AA” and “AAA” Eneloops. I use them in flashlights, mice, doorbell, thermostat, emergency lanterns, remotes, radios–heck, even my automatic trash can lid! Remember to buy extras so you can swap used batteries with fresh and still keep everything running. Pricey at first, Eneloops eventually pay for themselves since you’ll never need to replace them.The one key addition you need is a quality smart fast charger. I went with the Titanium MD-1600L that charges from the wall socket or a car’s power socket. This was a real lifesaver after Hurricane Harvey when I charged Eneloops from my car for almost a week!This latest set of Eneloops arrived in LESS than 24 hours fully charged. Five stars.
bob hayes –
I’ve been using this line of eneloop in both AA and AAA for several years now. I’ve been using them in everything I possibly can. Drones, cameras, remotes, thermostats, radios, remote thermometers, flashlights. They’re great. Store a long time, put out decent power and life, and are easy to charge and put away till needed. No leaks, weird power loss issues or failures so far. But their pricing is going up (what isn’t) so their value drops a bit. But I don’t need to buy disposable batteries ever again, so not a huge issue, and worth the price. I haven’t had to replace any of these yet, just add to my inventory as I find more devices to put them in.