Battery Brands Ranked From Worst To Best – SlashGear
Right around 35 years ago, Kodak partnered with Matsushita in order to stake a claim in the booming battery market. Today, its partner is a startup called Wildcat Discovery Technologies to produce leading-edge EV batteries. But all along the way, the consumer batteries branded by Kodak have suffered.
In an industry full of confusing product names, Kodak seems to be among the most determined to make discussion as bewildering as possible. We looked at four Kodak AAs: Extra Heavy Duty, Max, Super Heavy Duty, and Xtralife. The Carbon Zinc offerings (typically these have “heavy duty” somewhere in the name) are had even for Carbon Zinc. The Extra Heavy Duty’s high cost and mediocre duration scores made it the worst CinemaSound tested for cost per hour.
Then there’s Deleepow — which you probably haven’t run across unless you’ve searched for this specific brand on Amazon. Based mostly on reviews from Wirecutter and Amazon, we’d have to advise you to keep moving if you’re looking for a strong and reliable rechargeable AA.
Wirecutter found that Deleepow’s rechargeable batteries’ capacities were often rated far higher than the batteries’ actual, measurable capacities. The worst was the NiMH AA, which is rated by Deleepow at 3300 mAh, at the top of what is possible with an AA, but only measured 58 percent of that at 1917 mAh. Deleepow’s Lithium-ion AA also underperformed. Interestingly, the company’s Lithium-ion AAA was measured at a higher capacity than its rating.
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