brightnorm
Flashaholic
- Joined
- Oct 13, 2001
- Messages
- 9,027
<BLOCKQUOTE><font size="1" face="Verdana, Arial">quote:</font><HR>Originally posted by wus:
I wonder why you are all craving for this new lithium AAA ... do you really see a big advantage over well designed alkalines? From comparing AA lithiums and alkalines, I would say by far the biggest advantage of the lithium is it's much higher price (for the manufacturer, that is ...)
<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>
wus,
I have tested both Alkaline and Lithium AA's in 4xAA divelights Tek 40 and UKE Mini Q40.
The difference in runtime, especially bright runtime is significant.
The lithiums start whiter and brighter and maintain their advantage at least an hour longer than the expired alkalines, even when compared against the excellent Ray-O-Vac Maximums (a Best Buy IMO). This plus their previously mentioned advantages make them a first choice, especially for my "what if" lights.
Brightnorm
I wonder why you are all craving for this new lithium AAA ... do you really see a big advantage over well designed alkalines? From comparing AA lithiums and alkalines, I would say by far the biggest advantage of the lithium is it's much higher price (for the manufacturer, that is ...)
<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>
wus,
I have tested both Alkaline and Lithium AA's in 4xAA divelights Tek 40 and UKE Mini Q40.
The difference in runtime, especially bright runtime is significant.
The lithiums start whiter and brighter and maintain their advantage at least an hour longer than the expired alkalines, even when compared against the excellent Ray-O-Vac Maximums (a Best Buy IMO). This plus their previously mentioned advantages make them a first choice, especially for my "what if" lights.
Brightnorm