hopefully you'll do a nice measurement on one of them to indicate how much charge was left in it?
ie. don't charge it up but discharge it under known conditions to note initial voltage, run-time, drain, initial capacity
Yes, that's quite usual for eneloops. It's a sign they are manufactured to high standards.All four are at 1.32V (BC-900)/1.319 (DMM). I was surprised that they all had exactly the same voltage with my meter. Pretty good consitancy after sitting in the package for a year.
You would need a battery charger/analyzer such as the Maha C-9000 or a hobby charger that can discharge NiMh cells.How would I more scientifically determine the batteries capacity ?