Initial commit: HPR Knowledge Base MCP Server
- MCP server with stdio transport for local use - Search episodes, transcripts, hosts, and series - 4,511 episodes with metadata and transcripts - Data loader with in-memory JSON storage 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code) Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
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Episode: 1478
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Title: HPR1478: Batteries Part 2
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1478/hpr1478.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 03:52:31
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---
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music
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music
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music
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music
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music
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Okay, before we begin, I had a relisten to the podcast while I was putting it together
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and realised that it was really a bit rambly, a bit waffly and I guess I'm just not very
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good at talking off the cuff.
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So it's just to be warning that if you do find this a bit boring or a bit rambly, feel
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free to skip on and pick the next HPR, but hopefully it'll give you some interest.
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Anyway, here we go.
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Hello and welcome, hacker public radio audience.
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My name is Mr X, welcome to my 6th HPR podcast, it's been a while and I must apologise
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for the long interval that has passed as my last show.
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And I just start with thanking the people at HPR for making all this possible.
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I would never have pulled my first podcast together without them making this service available.
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It's truly a wonderful and invaluable resource on these here intertubes.
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If you have something interesting or some burst in passion, why not shake with the rest
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of us?
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It really isn't that hard, and even if you only manage one show, that's fine and great.
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But who knows, you might even go on to enjoy the challenge and with just more shows.
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If I can do it, anyone can.
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This is part 2 of my battery's podcast.
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This podcast will be a bit less scripted than part 1, and will cover how I got interested
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in batteries.
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In the process I will cover a few of the memorable battery up to the devices I've had over
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the years, and cover some of the pitfalls encountered during their lifetime of use.
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I must emphasise that having by no means an expert in batteries, some of the fine details
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in this podcast may even be inaccurate.
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I can backdo my best in the hope you find it interesting.
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I'll start by introducing to you my memorable battery-operated devices.
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See if you can identify any of them.
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I'll introduce you to them properly later on in the show.
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Okay, mystery object 1.
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It doesn't make much noise, but the only noise I can make with it is this.
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I don't suppose you will identify it from that.
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Well, I'll talk about more about it later on.
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Okay, mystery object 2, well that makes a good noise, I can maybe guess what, I don't
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know.
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Okay, that was mystery object 2, mystery object 3, turn it on.
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It makes a few noises out, okay.
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Mystery object 4, mystery object 4, mystery object 5, okay, see if you can work out this
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one, there you go, mystery object 5, and mystery object 6, well it doesn't make much noise
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either, apart from perhaps, you can hear that, not much clue in that one.
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As a young boy, I remember watching an episode of Twilight Zone on a small black and white
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portable TV, this being purred from a car battery under the seat of my granny's caravan.
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The episode was just getting to the crucial bit when a black water started to creep around
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the screen, at which point I immediately knew what this meant as I had experienced this
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many times before.
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This was the first signs that the battery voltage from the car battery was dropping, causing
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the picture on our black and white CRT tele to slowly but surely collapse in on itself.
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This was one of my all time favourite programmes and nothing was going to come between me watching
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this episode.
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While the battery voltage slowly but surely continued to drop, I carried on watching with
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baited breath, as the picture gradually got smaller and smaller, till finally the TV could
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no longer function and the TV lost horrors on to luck, as that is scrolling up the screen.
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I rushed to the back of the TV set to find tune in the vertical hold controls, which
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managed to stabilize a picture for a few more tantalising minutes, but eventually then
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was nigh and the screen started scrolling again.
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I knew we had a spare battery just next to the current one being used, but it wasn't
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a bad shape too.
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As quickly as possible I switched over to the spare battery, where I got a few extra
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minutes and the same process started all over again.
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I was desperate to see the end of my programme, I had a cunning plan.
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The plan I knew was not without risk, which at the very least would continue the relentless
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onslaught on the poor car battery tucked under the seat.
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This was indeed bad for the batteries but I didn't realise it at the time.
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One reflection, I don't suppose this would have stopped me as I knew what I was about
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to do was risky for the TV set itself, but as I said before, nothing was going to come
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between me and the last minutes of Twilight's own.
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I wondered if you can guess what I did.
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I propped up the seat cushion once again, turned one of the batteries 380 degrees and
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using an old screwdriver linked to positive turn off one battery to negative turn off the
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other battery.
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Just like when you put two batteries in a flashlight, I was in fact connecting the batteries in series.
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This combined the outweigh voltage of each battery, but I hope that because they were both
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flat, the combined out boot voltage would be near enough to have volts.
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As far as to say, to my amazement and to all other family members who knew nothing of
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such cunning, it worked.
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I got a few more minutes out of the poor batteries and thoroughly enjoyed the ending.
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Pity, I probably knackered the batteries in the process.
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I was an early adopter of rechargeable batteries.
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My first set of rechargeable batteries was every day nickel cadmium batteries.
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This wasn't what started me looking in more depth into rechargeable batteries though.
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It all happened many years later when I required a rechargeable shaver.
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The shaver in question was a particularly expensive shaver, one I would never have bought
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myself, because as an engineer I thought buying an expensive razor was all a big con.
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I owned a cheap electric razor which worked fine.
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My reasoning went something like this, an electric razor consists of an electric motor which
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spins the blade on the razor.
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A cheap razor spins a blade just as well as a dear razor, though extra cost only adds
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unnecessary rubbish, such as ultrasonic displays and clever charging circuits which will
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probably provide no benefit to the actual shaver one gets.
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While I'm here to say I was totally wrong.
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This shaver gave an amazing shave, the shaver was much closer than on my cheap razor.
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I still get a great shave with it today, many years later.
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I still don't really understand why this should happen.
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I guess they must either purposely build the cheap razor to a lower tolerance, or perhaps
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even worse to the same tolerance, but purposely move the blade further from the guard so as to
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produce an inferior shave.
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My expensive fantastic shaver is a Phillips 5890.
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I think I've now owned it for about eight or nine years, and the replacement battery
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is still going strong.
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The original battery failed not long after I got it, and I always thought I was doing
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the right thing, making sure I ran the battery until it was flat, and then recharge it.
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Isn't that what a manufacturer say you should do?
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I didn't want to encounter the didded memory effect.
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Also by this time I had given a few people in the past the same advice, and I also came
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across similar advice on a shaver forum, yes honestly there seems to be a forum for
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everything out there.
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At the same time I was beginning to question this philosophy, as people I know who didn't
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seem to care about their batteries seem to get more life from their batteries than I did.
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This was the catalyst that sparked me to hunt down and find the real truth about batteries,
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and what I found was fascinating, or at least I thought so at the time.
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Just as a little reminder, remember from my previous podcast, the number one rule, never
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ever drive your multi-cell batteries flat.
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I've explained this to various people at various times, some times underquest when they
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ask advice on batteries, and sometimes just because someone mentions batteries, I generally
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find that as I tell people about rechargeable batteries, the rise tentacles is over.
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I guess what one person find interesting, another finds utterly boring.
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Hopefully I won't have this effect on the Hacker Public Radio audience, or at least not
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to all of you I hope.
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As I mentioned previously, I've brought along a few battery-powered devices I've acquired
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over the years.
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I'll introduce them to you now in chronological order, starting first with the oldest and
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ending with the newest.
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I don't work for any of these companies that made these products, or have any connections
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with them, other than I've been particularly pleased with them over the years of their own
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them.
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Okay, the first item that I've brought along is a battery charger, and this battery
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charger is over ten years old, though, I reckon.
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It's made by a French company, I think, the name on the top says H-A-H-H-N-E-L power
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station TC-MX, so the thing about it is it's a trickle charger, and it can charge up the
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four batteries at once, and you can charge one battery, two batteries at a time, three
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or four, all independently.
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The noise that you heard in the beginning of the podcast was that there, actually there
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that I can clip that folds up and down and changes the length of the battery compartment
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area, so either you can fit AAAs in it or double A's, it's a very simple charger.
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But excellent nonetheless, because it's a trickle charger, that's that's the main point.
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A trickle charger is considered, when you charge a battery, less than a tenth of the
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capacity for battery, that's considered a trickle charge, so for example if you've got
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a battery, let's say, it's a 1,000 milliamp hour battery, and if you charge it at 100 milliamps
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or less, then that's considered a trickle charge.
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The thing about trickle charges is that it's safe to leave the battery charger on over
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extended periods of time, now I wouldn't say it's a good idea to leave the battery charge
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on indefinitely, but if you were to leave it on maybe for a day or something, it's not
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desperate, you also get the maximum charge in your battery, because the battery is charging
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slowly and it can build a good charge up, so there's a lot of good reasons for using
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a slow charger, it's also gentler on the battery, and you're likely to get more charge,
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discharge cycles using a trickle charger.
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I remember when I used to be interested in electronics and stuff that used to get practical
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electronics here in Britain, and there was numerous regular articles of charging circuits
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that you could build to charge your rechargeable batteries, that to move in nickel, cadmium
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batteries, I've seen people at work who've purchased some of these fast chargers and their
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batteries have failed fairly quickly, perhaps they put them on charge before they were reasonably
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done, maybe they topped them up, or maybe the circuitry inside it just overcharged them
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or I don't know how that particularly happened, but it's not as good for your batteries anyway,
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a slow charger's far better, and typically when you're charging a trickle charge, or if
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you're charging a battery, you charge it 120% of the capacity, so for example, this charger
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is a charge's doubly batteries at 200mAh, so if I have a set of batteries in the 2000mAh
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batteries, 2000mAh means two amps, so if you've got 2000mAh batteries, these batteries
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can theoretically store or produce 2000mAh for one hour when you're discharging them, then
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if you charge them at 200mAh, that's one tenth of 2000, hope you're following this, I was
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not too confusing, so one tenth of 2000 is 200mAh, and if you charge that for 12 hours,
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then your battery's likely to be charged, so that's fully charged, so 200mAh times 12mAh
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is 2400mAh, so it's about 120% of the capacity, and you can do that for any battery, any charge
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circuit, but if you go, if you're charging a lot quicker than a tenth of the capacity,
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then you need to be very careful, and you don't need circuits that watch for the battery
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overheating, or pressure building up in the battery, all sorts of things, you're going
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to be very careful if you're charging at a fast rate, really slow chargers are far better,
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far safer, far better for the battery, I would really recommend a slow charge if you can
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get hold of one, but they're about like hands teeth these days are really hard to get hold
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of, okay, my next object is a power base electric drill, there you go, a butt, one of these,
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short notice from my shop, here locally, this is about 10 years old as well, this drill,
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if my home base shop, and what happened was that we had a rush job on, and we were going
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to look for a drill, a quick, quick bit hold of a drill for a job we were doing, and
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my colleague was going to buy a hand operated drill, and this hand operated drill was 12 pounds,
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and then I noticed that just a longer bit there was a cordless battery drill for three pounds,
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more that's 15 pounds, so it was exceptionally cheap, and I didn't necessarily expect very much
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but it turned out to be an excellent drill, not only was it cheap, but unusually for that price at
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the time, it was fully variable speed you can, as you can hear you can fully vary the speed,
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and we used it for many hours, and drilled through large chunks of aluminium as well,
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and really demanding jobs, and it worked superbly, and I ended up getting one of these from
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myself, because I was so impressed, so a few years later I used to put the thing on charge
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for long periods of time, and the battery would heat up, but I wouldn't think any of it,
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maybe charge overnight sort of thing, and it was some time later I'd been charging it,
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and I thought to myself, well over a few years later I realised I found it a bit more
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bit better than I thought, I don't think I'm doing this thing any good really, because of course
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once a battery starts to rise in temperature, that means it's now actually entered the overcharge,
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and in fact it's a good indication that the thing's overcharged, and so I had to look at the
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the charger that came with the device, and I had to look at the charge current,
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and I've got that here, so the charge current was 17 volts at 400 milliamps,
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and so I thought 400 milliamps, what's the capacity of the battery,
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and I looked at the user manual for the drill, I found that the capacity of the battery was
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1100 milliamps, and when I took the the charge current, which was 400 milliamps, and you multiply that
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by 12 hours or so, which is what I was charging it for, it came out at 4800 milliamps, so that's
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way more than the original battery, which was 1100, so I was obviously overcharging the battery,
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probably damaging it in the process, I thought that's not very good, so I did a few calculations,
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and the battery capacity was 1100 milliamps, and 120 percent of 1100 is 1320, so I was really looking
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to charge it, 1320 was a figure I was looking for, so if you take 1320, and you divide it by
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the charge current, which is 400, then that comes out at 3.3, so really I should have been charging
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it for 3.3 hours, and I just only got up to 3.5, so I actually put a sticker on the battery itself,
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that says charge time 3.5 hours maximum, so I guess really the way you're supposed to use this
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thing is that you know you pop it on charge for, and I will show before you use it, do the
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drilling you're going to do, and then maybe pop it on charge, but before you put it away again,
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and that's what I've done, and as I say it's over, it's 9 or 10 years old, something like that,
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and still got loads, it's really, really strong, loads and loads of charge, and it's still, and it's a
|
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a nickel cadmium pack, so you can't get ni-cad badges anymore, of course the great thing about ni-cads
|
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is they've got a really, really low internal resistance, so that means that because of that you can
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pull a huge current from them, and of course in these demanding situations where you're trying to
|
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drill through, got objectionable at the opposite, the electric motors are drawing a huge current
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from a battery, many, many amps, so it's a great drill, really, really good, the chuck wobbles
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we've got when you use it, so it's obviously not exactly a high precision, it's got various clutch
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settings, so that it slips, and doesn't drive too hard if you're trying to put screws in and
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out, because it's got a couple of screwdriver, and it can fit to the thing, and then there's obviously
|
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a drill section where it doesn't slip at all, but yeah, X and drill homebases, it's actually got
|
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no power base, it's called, power base, I presume that's the second I know, own brand for
|
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home base, but yeah, it just keeps on going and going, I don't know how long it's going to
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continue, but it's been a great drill, really, really good, can't believe what a great value it's
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been, okay, Mr. the object 3, this is a Canon 80 digital camera, again this is about 10 years old as
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well, it was particularly impressed with the Canon brand of cameras, and I could be wrong,
|
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but I'll be able to remember, somebody telling me that Canon was started by a group of scientists
|
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who were avid photographers, who vowed never to compromise in quality, always thought that
|
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well, some camera manufacturers went for the G-Wiz feature set that may have compromised
|
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the quality of the camera, but it's what people are looking for, sort of suckering the poor
|
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consumers into, product disputes that look shiny or has this feature that's really of no benefit,
|
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as far as taking photographs are concerned, so there's a few interesting things about this Canon
|
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camera, it was slated for having a small screen at the time, but the reason it had a small screen
|
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was that it had a flip out screen so that you could flip the back screen out and rotate it and
|
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what not, now the thing about this is that what that meant was that if you wanted to take a photograph,
|
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for example, over the head of a cloud, you could hold it up,
|
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pull the flip out screen, rotate it around, and tip it down to look over the heads of clouds or
|
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whatever, and you could see where the lens was pointing, so that was actually a very useful feature,
|
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there's less other things you could use it for, just getting into all compositions,
|
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if you wanted to take a selfie as they call it now, if you turn it through 180 degrees and the
|
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screen then faces the same way as the lens, and it means you can see your own image on the screen,
|
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it also flipped the image so that it wasn't the wrong way around when it was flipped
|
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round when you could see yourself the right way around sort of thing, very clever,
|
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so it was immensely useful in various situations, and this meant that by doing that, having this
|
||||
flip out, it's quite a small camera, and by having this flip out screen it had to have a
|
||||
quite a big border around the bed, which meant that the actual screen itself was small, but
|
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it was far more useful to have a flip out screen than to have a large screen,
|
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and the only real reason for using a screen is either for shooting these awkward
|
||||
shots where you can't look through the viewfinder because it's above your head or whatever,
|
||||
or the other reason you might use it is when you get in close to an object and
|
||||
trying to frame an object, if you look through the viewfinder at the top,
|
||||
and because the viewfinder doesn't look through the actual aperture where the
|
||||
the lens is, then you get to Parlax error, and in the closer you get to the object, the more the
|
||||
more that that keeps in, so for example, maybe taking a picture of a closer object, look at it
|
||||
through the viewfinder and it looks perfectly and framed, take the shot, and then find it
|
||||
it's off to one side, but if you're looking at taking a picture of an object there's a few feet
|
||||
away or further off into the distance, then the Parlax error is almost null, so if you're taking
|
||||
a shot you should really look through the viewfinder, and of course by holding up to your eye
|
||||
it makes the camera steadier, so you see people all the time with digital cameras now within
|
||||
and then they'll just hold it out in front themselves, and of course that tends to cause wobbling
|
||||
shakes, not a steady hold of the camera, so it's far more preferable to use the
|
||||
light piece when you can, and it also means you're saving battery power. The other good thing about
|
||||
this screen was that it was a matte shade, not high gloss, and of course all the cameras now
|
||||
have a gloss coating on them which show fingerprints and you get loads of reflection from the sun
|
||||
and whatnot, so again not following the trend, but actually giving you a better product,
|
||||
you see this on laptops as well nowadays where there are all these high gloss reflective screens
|
||||
as well as what people want, but in reality the matte finish, the anti-reflective coatings far
|
||||
far far superior, the other thing I got slated for was the fact that it takes standard
|
||||
80 batteries, so 480 batteries, and you end up with this kind of lump sticking at the front slightly,
|
||||
so it actually makes the camera easier to grip in the hand, and in fact really I see it nothing
|
||||
with a positive because what it means, because it takes standard batches, it means that you're never
|
||||
stuck, if you need to get a shot you can always go into a camera and a sharpened and buy ordinary
|
||||
batteries, the other advantages that you can have, alkaline batches can sit in a camera for several
|
||||
years, obviously watching it for leakage of course because it can't leak, but they can they can
|
||||
sit in a camera for many years because they have a very slow discharge rate, standard batteries,
|
||||
you can pick it up months later and the camera is still in operation, whereas if you've got a
|
||||
a nickel cadmium pack or a nickel metal hydride pack, you come back a month later and it's self-disk
|
||||
charge and it's flat, so useless, when you want to just for a quick picture, one or two pictures,
|
||||
you know, be useful at all, the other thing I've decided for was for you know how long the
|
||||
batteries actually last, but in fact the when you got a good set of nickel metal hydride batteries
|
||||
and in this camera, you got and you work out the amp I'm rating in the wattage and one of the
|
||||
batches lasted for hours and hours, as well as any of these many battery packs you got
|
||||
and other cameras at the time, obviously now all the cameras are going to these these specialist
|
||||
batches, of course I'm now using a lithium ion or a lithium polymer batteries which have a huge
|
||||
capacity and I think the lithium polymer or lithium ion, I'm not quite sure, one of these two,
|
||||
I've got a very very slow discharge, so you can leave them for quite a long, long time, they still
|
||||
retain their charge, so obviously battery batteries have moved on in time, but of course they've
|
||||
got to be carefully charged, you know, careful monitoring all the time because they can,
|
||||
they can explode if they're not properly charged, correct, or safely, the camera gave many years of
|
||||
faithful use, but you know many years later a fault developed and in fact it's now no longer
|
||||
operational, when you took a picture you got a kind of purple mess on the screen and I couldn't
|
||||
work out what we're going on in there, I thought well I've got nothing to lose, it's way outside
|
||||
warranty and decided to take the camera to bits and it was quick and complex to take the bits and
|
||||
I managed to take the bits and managed and I couldn't find anything I think what was wrong with it,
|
||||
you know, these things are so devilishly complex inside and put it back together again and
|
||||
did the, it was almost perfect but the zoom control doesn't quite feel right,
|
||||
although it does work fine and it was shortly after I did that that I heard on a podcast,
|
||||
somebody saying that Canon had admitted that there was a batch of faulty
|
||||
CCDs produced, that's the charged couple device that's the chip behind the lens which
|
||||
records the image and that was probably what was wrong with my camera and what they were saying was
|
||||
that even cameras which were out of warranty they were apparently at free of charge and of course
|
||||
this was very, if this was, if that's true then it's quite commendable but of course because
|
||||
I'd opened mine up I thought well I can't really turn it now, so that was a bit of a shame but
|
||||
it was a fine camera, I don't know whether modern canons are like, whether they've given
|
||||
to popularism and now have shiny big screens and stopped using the flip out screens and touch
|
||||
like, I don't know if everyone else is doing it, I suppose they have to do it or they catch
|
||||
yellow cameras, I don't know, okay my next message object is a Phillips 5, 8, 9, 10 electric
|
||||
shaver and it's now about, it's about nine years old now, I think it was at least 120 pounds when
|
||||
you and as I says nine years old you can probably double that figure in today's money,
|
||||
the battery failed very soon after I got it as I explained earlier and I opened the shaver up and
|
||||
was amazed at the alternate complexity, there was two side, two double sided multi-layer
|
||||
surface mounted boards, submerged into this thing, it's quite remarkable, it learns on average how
|
||||
long you take it to shave and presumably monitors battery load and conditioning and reports on an
|
||||
LCD screen how many shaves are left at the moment it's saying 31 shaves, it's alone, I think I
|
||||
never go below 20 shaves now because I don't want to drive the battery flat and that's probably
|
||||
why it's lasted for about nine years, it's this existing battery, it was a nickel, I think it was
|
||||
originally a nickel cadmium battery but I couldn't get a replacement nickel cadmium which I think
|
||||
is a nickel metal hydride battery that's in this, it was a very very slightly different dimensions as
|
||||
well so I had to modify it slightly inside but it was a hig of a job to replace, I'm glad it's
|
||||
lasted too long and it gives unmatched close shave, it's almost as good as a traditional razor
|
||||
without the irritation, I tend to find it to a standard razor, it irritates my skin,
|
||||
it's also a thanks superior to one of these foiled razors I've used in the past,
|
||||
I've never been happy with that, so this is like one of these Philly shave rotary razors,
|
||||
absolutely fantastic, I don't know how long it's going to continue to go in but we'll see, excellent
|
||||
days, I've been very pleased with it, my next best to object is a Garmin Street Pilot i3 GPS,
|
||||
this is a six years old, I think the original Street Pilot was called the i2 and it used a black
|
||||
and white and LCD skin of the thing, it's it's very small, it's it's a let's see if I've got a
|
||||
ruler here, the screen is in fact just under two inches and no diagonally it's
|
||||
two and a quarter inches diagonally something like that and so the the device is two and a half inches
|
||||
by yeah two and a half inches square sort of thing, yeah something like that it's pretty small,
|
||||
a tennis ball size GPS unit, it was arrogant, it was way ahead of it's time at the time,
|
||||
it was one of the first GPS's to have full UK post codes, full UK post code coverage and
|
||||
making it to easy to enter a jess's, exact to jess's, it was very very good, very small screen
|
||||
by today's standards, it gives exceptionally good battery life, it's good at a special LCD screen,
|
||||
I don't know, it's quite amazing because it can't be washed out by bright light, I don't know how
|
||||
they do it but although it can be bothered by reflection unfortunately it's kind of got a glossy
|
||||
finished it, so you can get reflections from sun but bright light certainly can't wash out,
|
||||
no matter how bright it gets, it can't be washed out, it's got super loud announcements,
|
||||
so it doesn't matter how loud the interior of the car gets, how scabby you're old,
|
||||
your car noisy it is, you can still hear the announcements nice and clear which is
|
||||
five, oh it's a bit loud, so I was always very impressed with the announcements,
|
||||
with very simple and cluttered clear display, giving only what's necessary, you basically got a
|
||||
small image of the road ahead and on the right hand side it told you how many miles to your
|
||||
next turning and on the left hand side your time of arrival and that's really all there was too,
|
||||
very very basic and yeah it ran from two standard A batteries, the unit was actually supplied with
|
||||
four batteries, so you got two spares, I just recently in last year maybe started using the
|
||||
second set, I had only used the first set because these were at least started to fail,
|
||||
partly because on a few occasions I'd let the battery be different flat, I was using it till
|
||||
I've actually got a message saying low battery, obviously if you've got the thing on for a few hours
|
||||
you can send this big cut out, but I think I got four or five hours of maybe even longer than that
|
||||
on one charge, so you'd maybe do a bit of a journey, you'd use it at the next day, not charge
|
||||
up and then you'd be get cut out and you get the message low battery and that was obviously damaged
|
||||
the battery and it's now in a field, but I guess I did get I don't know, seven or eight years
|
||||
at a one set of batteries, it's not too bad really, it also had a sensor at which look, check the
|
||||
ambient light colours and inverted the colours at low level light so that you didn't get ice
|
||||
dark blue images, just to make it nice and soft on the eye, it was very good,
|
||||
not long after I got the thing, well a year or so after I got it, I inadvertently dropped it
|
||||
and snapped the battery cover and I sent a letter to Garmin and said you know I've been very pleased
|
||||
with the device, it's really an exceptional product, I don't suppose you could tell me how I
|
||||
can get hold, how I could purchase a new battery compartment and you know a few days later
|
||||
an envelope arrived in the post with a replacement battery cover so I was delighted you know I
|
||||
was fully prepared to buy a replacement cover, but I got one for nothing so I was just delighted,
|
||||
great service, really really good device, eventually what happened was that the
|
||||
the clips broke in the battery compartment on the new battery compartment after many years of
|
||||
use and because it's sprung, you know you couldn't hold it on, so I thought well I'm not
|
||||
going to throw this thing away just because the battery compartments, the clips are filled,
|
||||
so I took some drastic action and I opened the unit up and I drilled one hole in one
|
||||
side of the cover on the actual main cover of the unit and two holes on the battery compartment
|
||||
and so what I do now is when I load the batteries up I put the battery cover over the batteries
|
||||
and a wrap a wire round and round between the three screws around the back of the unit and then
|
||||
push it under the the the bind of wires and it seals it shut so it only takes a few seconds to
|
||||
to do this you know and I only use the thing occasionally but basically you take it on a journey
|
||||
and maybe towards the end of the journey you'll switch it on because it's usually the last bit
|
||||
your journey which you don't know you know obviously you know when you're having your first set off
|
||||
and you know the main route to where you're trying to get to but it's the last bit of the journey
|
||||
which is usually unknown to you but I just say the battery life on this is extraordinary
|
||||
I could go you know all the way from Scotland to Manchester and further and on one charge leaving
|
||||
on all the time but you can switch it on at any time in it and it picks up where it left off and
|
||||
just a really great wee divide really handy I know nowadays most people have obviously GPS on
|
||||
their phones so it's a bit redundant but well a lot of these GPS devices the then car ones
|
||||
the the have an internal battery and of course I'm inflated you switch it on and it's and it's flat
|
||||
and the device itself may actually be drawing current from the battery to hold up a clock or
|
||||
whatever inside the thing and so not only is it flat but it's continuing to to draw current from
|
||||
the battery which really tends to just ruin the battery and a colleague of what he had a
|
||||
when he's a smaller GPS unit with a internal sealed battery and it failed many years ago
|
||||
and this one's still going strong so just excellent it um to give you some idea how things
|
||||
have changed I've just tried it's got a wee SD card in it and uh what signs is it I'm trying to see
|
||||
256 megabytes I think it is so that gives you some idea how I roll the thing is but
|
||||
just a fantastic key wee portable GPS just brilliant really really good um who knows how long
|
||||
I'll keep going but excellent finally my uh last mystery object I I sense a clip plus
|
||||
and it's uh at least four years old um bed cheap uh light it's got a clear sharp led display so it's
|
||||
it's just I've just seen it what colour is it it's uh kind of remember it's kind of blue and
|
||||
blue and amber is it something like that kind of amber colours and blue yet it's uh intuitive
|
||||
menus very easy to to navigate um great wee player really good I think it'll play Og and uh
|
||||
I've also put rockbox in it so you can it can actually dual boot and run rockbox and a thing
|
||||
although the screen's a bit small for for navigating on rockbox but um yeah great wee device uh
|
||||
the downside is it's got one of these sealed internal batteries uh it can't be disconnected when
|
||||
it's not in use uh but I can't really complain it's over four years old and uh if you look after it
|
||||
the battery should last a long time and in fact it's lasted four years shows that it can
|
||||
I never let it get driven flat uh remember current has drawn from it even when it's switched off
|
||||
um so you know I I tend to listen to audio books and music and stuff on a regular basis so
|
||||
I'm keeping an eye on it and if it if it drops below 40% charge something like that I'll put it back on
|
||||
charge again um but uh the battery life is there's very long so you know I can go weeks without
|
||||
charging a thing uh I say that's after four years of use uh I was speaking to a colleague who
|
||||
I recommended uh a Santa Clip 2 and uh a Santa Clip Plus and I was speaking to him and he had the
|
||||
had the thing about a year or something like that maybe even less than that uh I said to him how
|
||||
you get on with any so uh uh I don't know about this but I tend to use my phone now anywhere these days
|
||||
but uh the battery doesn't last very long so I tend to use it and I thought well you know if you
|
||||
don't look after that's what tends to happen uh if you just if you just let the the battery go flat and
|
||||
I get driven flat um then that's what happens and you can't if you can disconnect the battery then
|
||||
it will okay you could you could leave it as long as you like but the fact that you can't disconnect
|
||||
means it gets driven flat and and damages the thing you know that's the way the
|
||||
things are made these days in this throwaway world um don't know the thing I've heard about it is
|
||||
that they I think the power button on on on the on the top of it can be prone to uh to feeling so
|
||||
I try and push it it's gently spotable when I'm turning it on and off and only turn it on and off
|
||||
off I tend to turn it on and not turn it off unless I have to because it auto turns off anyway
|
||||
so you can minimise the number of things you push it and also I never you I never remove the
|
||||
or virtually never remove the uh the headphones from it these headphone jacks uh jack plugs
|
||||
and sockets are renowned for becoming crackling and and troublesome so basically I put the headphones
|
||||
and never take them out and that's a really half to of course and that means that uh I get no
|
||||
problems on that either uh it's got a wee clip on the back which is what it's called a Santa
|
||||
Clip and you can clip on your pocket or your shirt or whatever it's just great you almost forget
|
||||
you've got it on when you're when you're using it greatly player Santa Clip made in America I believe
|
||||
Santa uh highly recommended uh I guess most people use their phone these days
|
||||
okay that's about it for this episode I hope you enjoyed the podcast remember as I said
|
||||
earlier if you have an interesting story or passion why not share it with the rest of us
|
||||
there's a vast community if you're out there get off your bums and give us a show I'm sure
|
||||
we'd find it interesting I can be contacted at mrx at hpr at googlemail.com that's mrx
|
||||
at hpr the art symbol googlemail.com so until next time thank you and goodbye
|
||||
you have been listening to Hacker Public Radio or Tacker Public Radio does our
|
||||
we are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday on death week
|
||||
today's show like all our shows was contributed by a hpr listener like yourself if you ever
|
||||
consider recording a podcast then visit our website to find out how easy it really is
|
||||
hacker public radio was founded by the digital dog pound and the economical computer cloud
|
||||
hpr is funded by the binary revolution at binref.com all binref projects are crowd
|
||||
sponsored by lunar pages from shared hosting to custom private clouds go to lunar pages.com
|
||||
for all your hosting needs unless otherwise stasis today's show is released under a creative
|
||||
commons attribution share a life he does own life
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user