Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/01/15
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Hi Bruce, Thank you for an informative post from one who is obviously knowledgeable in the area! Can you comment upon using two 1.5 v silver batteries instead of a 1/3N Li battery? My M6 TTL has gone through several sets in 6 mos, and the silver batteries seem to last longer. Are silver as good in low temperatures? Tom - ----- Original Message ----- From: <MicroGrid@aol.com> To: <leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us> Sent: Saturday, January 15, 2000 7:28 AM Subject: Re: [Leica] Battery for M6 (long, and maybe useless!) > I have lurked, and posted a few questions on this list for about a year now. > I really don't have time to read everything you all post but it is very > interesting. My ears perk up when the topics touch batteries. Our business is > manufacturing "MicroGrid, a mesh used as the substrate in the manufacture of > advanced batteries. We supply this to the world's battery manufactures, > primary as well as secondary. The ones that will interest Leicaphiles are the > 1/3N Lithium cells, as well as the 2/3A, (CR123). Both have my mesh in them. > When I was going to school, I worked for my Dad in a large photo supply house > in Ohio, selling Leicas as well as batteries. > > Suffice it to say that I have heard all of the conventional wisdom of the > foibles, brand preferences, etc., of battery choices, from hearing aids, to > car batteries. > > I just wanted to compliment the posters on this list. I monitor many > application lists such as this for battery related items. There is much less > repetition of some of the "conventional falsehoods" here than anywhere. > For camera meter applications, it would be hard to beat a cylindrical lithium > battery, such as the 1/3N. I am not familiar with where the voltage cutoff is > on an M6, ( I still have not made up my mind between another M5 or an M6HM) > but the discharge curve on a 1/3 N cell is stable enough to be predicted and > accommodated. Lithium would be my choice hands down. > Another poster mentioned cold weather. Lithium excels here as well. The > military chose LiSo2 cells 20 years ago because of theirwide temperature > tolerance, (heat as well as cold). > > For high Drain applications such as flash, gram for gram Lithium is the clear > winner. The 2/3A Lithium cell made all of those P&S possible, with their > motors for focus & winding as well as capacitor recharging. > > So if I do add an M6 to my collection of 25 tear old Leicas, you can bet > there will be a Li cell in it. > BTW I was at Varta's plant where they still made the Mercury PX625's last > month. They have stopped production of these cells, (German Law) so buy 10 > and refrigerate them if you can find them. If there is no Chinese producer, > and I don't think so, that will be it. The best alternative is Zn-air. > > Sorry to respond so late, and so long to this post. > > Bruce Bowman > Killingworth CT >