
Right out of the box these Lenmar 1000mAh could be charged hardly to 600mAh. After several days of retesting they could barely be charged till 600-900mAh. Very disappointed by this gross misrepresentation. This Lenmar product should be sold as 600mAh. The only reaction from Lenmar's seller ANTOnline was they don't know what they are selling.
Buy Lenmar Battery, PRO, AAA, 10 Pack, 1.2V 1000mAh NI-MH Now
I've had 8 of these AAAs that I've been heavily using for well over a year along with a couple dozen AAs. All have them been running fine at their expected mah rating. They've excepted a charge fine every time on 3 of my chargers, all of different brands. However, about half of the AAs would not accept a charge on a fourth, Sony, 15-minute charger. So if you have problems, just try a different charger.I'm buying 10 more of these today.
Read Best Reviews of Lenmar Battery, PRO, AAA, 10 Pack, 1.2V 1000mAh NI-MH Here
I bought a set of these and 4 batteries were dead in a few months with no much use. I also bought a Lenmar for my digital camera that holds half of what it used to hold. The original battery that came with my camera almost holds the same charge as when it was new. I honestly don't think Lenmar makes good quality batteries. I am not planning on buying Lenmar again.Want Lenmar Battery, PRO, AAA, 10 Pack, 1.2V 1000mAh NI-MH Discount?
I purchased these to replace batteries for my Panasonic KX-TGA101S phone handsets (Panasonic KX-TGA101S Extra Handset with Charger for KX-TG1032S, KX-TG1033S, KX-TG1034S Cordless Phones, Silver) which barely held a charge anymore. These are great. While I've never timed the original batteries or these replacements, they keep these handsets charged for a very long time. They can also be charged with the standard base that these handsets use. So the replacement is cheap and transparent to my family members; they just realized one day that their handsets weren't dying after a few days of usage without being recharged.Before researching replacements for the stock batteries in my handsets, I didn't realize they used "regular" batteries that are similar to batteries I already use (eneloop)(Sanyo Eneloop Ni-MH Charger and 8 Rechargeable AA and 4 Rechargeable AAA Batteries). I've been using eneloop batteries in my other devices for some time. So, a cool thing that I do now is use the phone handsets as "free" battery chargers. When another device (such as a tv remote) dies, I just swap the batteries with the batteries from a phone handset (or two) and place the handset(s) back on the base(s). Now I always have fresh AAA batteries available without even thinking about it.
As far as I can see, these work pretty much identical to the eneloop batteries. Time will tell which ones last longer (per charge and lifetime) for the dollar, but I'm pretty sure I've found a less expensive alternative to suit my rechargeable battery needs.
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