the battery gets to a point where although it is still running it is not powerful enough to turn the screw all the way home. If you then recharge it from this point (partial charge), in the end you are going to get the memory effect.
Sonic":13cvuia1 said:no "memory" effect, where effective capacity is lost through repeated partial charging.
Colin C":188kwv2d said:I have seen memory effect out side of a lab but that was with army radio batteries and that was a pain, when you thought you had a charged battery to find after about half an hour it was dead.
Not being an electronics engineer ( Antique restorer / cabinet maker ) I will just I have been put right :shock: , but what was said is that memory effect does not happen and was just saying that I have seen it.Tony":12ns41n0 said:Memory effect does not exist in modern batteries. This is a fact known to all electronics engineers.
Colin C":1zjvoqbq said:Tony , if you do have to correct some thing said on here , I do hope you find a better way of putting it . We are all here to learn from each other
Tony wrote:
No recharable batteries suffer memory effects these days. People who believe they do are 10 years out of touch.
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