@lichme Got these the last time — months ago. Still work and they're the only 9v ones I've seen (though I've not looked hard). Considering the price of alkaline batteries, it's a decent deal even if one dies in a few years
@RedOak hmmmm, so maybe they should change it to as seen on meh.... But then where to sell such a product when even meh can't sell anymore of them, eBay?
@mehdaf Sell it at Woot! Given the number of times they let shysters pedal counterfeit goods via sponsored "deals", nothing is too shitty for them.
@jaremelz Let it loose? Fine. This might kill @mfladd, though ...
Thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you, and thank you! That covers four new AA California Fleece hoodies I bought at $5.99/ea., two $1.99 woot shirts, and an unworn purple catshirt. Because purple. And cat. And shirt.
@Thumperchick they cant mess with Twofer Tuesday. Shes like a national treasure! Besides...if they didnt i wouldnt have something to write on the product page...
@Kidsandliz That's just the kind of wacky stunt I would expect from a company that calls itself "mediocre". People would never expect it! Unless they sent out a newsletter! And they sent out a newsletter... I.O.U....
Which, of course makes, if you buy this then you don't need to stock up when they have their gabillion AA battery sales... Smart meh - undercut another staple you sell LOL
@Kidsandliz I bought a very nice battery charger with very nice rechargeable batteries, and when they got weak, my wife threw them away...so I have a very nice battery charger.
I got these last time. I used one once, but the loss of battery capacity made it not worth the trouble. That and not trusting it to be charging overnight.
Well fuck, Tuesday already? Here we go again as we find ourselves at the corner of impulsivity and temptation as we near that janky ass pawn shop on the wrong side of town. Oddly enough...Twofer Tuesday is absent...but there was a note. "Went to the dump to find old batteries...dumbasses just throw those fuckers away. I have the power now to restore life where life was once gone. I'm a mighty motherfucking sorcerer!" ...Calm the fuck down Twofer...they are just batteries and you don't even live in a house to burn down.
@studerc What you live in your car? In a tent? Trust me on this though - tents burn down. When I worked for outward bound in Scotland an instructor managed to do just that while he was in the tent. Saved his hiking boots and sleeping bag and the rest was a flash in the pan (fortunately in the snow).
It isn't the charge that's the concern, it's how long it lasts the second time around.. Then the third and if there's such a thing, the fourth. Also when I had one of these (not this brand) it required that once recharged (1) it be used in the same do-dad that ran it down the first time and (2) placed in the same positions.. Now tell me, how many out there even pays attention to the order they're placed so long as they lay negative to positive and I'm not about to color code the buggers.. Hey! Wait! how 'bout selling a color coder that will actually stick to the battery without rubbing off as you put them in or pull them back out?
Scientific American article: "One of the necessary conditions for a battery to be rechargeable is that the underlying chemical changes that occur during an electrical discharge from the cell must be efficiently reversed when an opposite electrical potential is applied across the cell." It must then be able to sustain this process efficiently and safely over many charging cycles for a battery to be labeled rechargeable.
While your typical alkaline battery has a reversible chemical process it performs more poorly with each charge. "In the case of the nonrechargeable battery," writes Frank McLarnon in Scientific American, "when one attempts to recharge the battery by reversing the direction of electron current flow, at least one of the electrochemical oxidation-reduction reactions is not reversible." The result is a lossy charge. And this assumes that a buildup of hydrogen gas in the reverse process hasn't caused the battery to rupture.
@mmaghakian.. They'll also warn you (in a small disclaimer) not to over-charge them (don't charge unattended over night) else they might blow up so now you gotta keep your eyeballs on 'em while their charging.. Too much hassle.
@mwarren Here's the more relevant portion of the article:
The alkaline batteries (which are generally based on the conversion of MnO2 and Zn to Mn3O4 and ZnO) offer an excellent example of this last point. Although the chemical changes at the electrodes can be reversed, until recently alkaline batteries were manufactured only to function as primary cells. Recharging one of these primary cells could allow the battery to be reused, but the possible number of recharging cycles for such a cell is very limited--it performs more poorly with each recharge. More important, recharging an old-fashioned alkaline battery is not safe. During or after a recharge, the battery might generate enough hydrogen gas to cause an explosion.
I had a charger like this, but big enough to accommodate D batteries, when I was a kid. It didn't restore batteries back like they were new, but you could use it multiple times and squeeze a bunch more juice out of them. I loved it. It was great for the hundreds of hours I put on Mario Golf and Dr. Mario on the old Game Boy.
But now that I make my own money? Not worth the hassle (and the unreliability) to save a buck here and there. But at this price, it may be worth experimenting with for people who run through a lot of batteries, don't need long-life reliability, and are okay with more frequent battery changes.
Buuuuuttt ;) the concept of extending the life of an alkaline battery does work if you recharge it before it is more than about 15% drained and if you don't recharge them too often.
Do it to a battery that is too drained and it won't add charge. Dead is dead, or rather too dead is not going to recharge.
Do it too many times and it will make a mess. I've never had one leak with only five recharges, but I have had them leak after eight cycles (though only with Duracells).
So, if I wasn't up already, which I usually am anyways but often not at midnight on Tuesday (or is that really Monday? Confused). But. IF I were still awake, which I am, it would behoove me to never miss a "From Meh! It's Mid Night...Live!" since with the reality of the middle age can drag a person's psyche down to a Meh's level easily. And yet, it is with trepidation and an anxiousness that I sit begging for the next comment that will send giggles down my spine and up my, we'll never mind. It's with a sigh that I notice the clock ticking and my nice cpr or cpa or cna or "keeper" as I call them (in my head only so they don't notice if I pee myself with a laugh out loud emoticon) heading towards me because jollyousness is not allowed once the Slipper disengages from her front left foot... Meaning 11:58pm. So long from my world but don't stop on my account.
This thing has two decent things in its favor. 1) It charges rechargeable batteries too, not just "alkaline". It charges NiCd or NiMH rechargeables and should do a decent job with those. 2) It will charge batteries individually, that means you can charge ONE battery, and presumably it stops charging each one battery when that battery is as full as it can take. Really cheap chargers charge by pairs, sending 3 volts of charge into a pair, which is not good and can damage both batteries in the pair when one battery is healthier than the other. And you can mix alkaline, NiCd, NiMH at one time to charge, and AAs and AAAs, since each charges independently. 3) It's about as small as an independent cell charger can be. Yeah that's three.
@ojohn I see no reason to think this will stop once a battery is charged. It's possible, but you'd think they would advertise that fact, and the warning not to overcharge batteries United the opposite.
@craigthom Where is this warning to not overcharge batteries in this? Where's any warning about charging overnight or anything like that?
Its own instruction sheet says that if a full battery is placed in it, it won't charge it. It has circuitry that keeps a test on each battery - that is why it can recharge alkaline, NiCd, and NiMH - each can hold a different amount of charge, then this charger stops charging each "full" cell and shows that one as full even if there are three more still charging. Lots of more expensive chargers do this, this seems to be the cheapest one that can do this for each cell individually. Note that "full" doesn't mean as full as if it was a new battery, just "full" meaning that's all the charge it can hold any more. Even rechargeable batteries lose total capacity with multiple recharging cycles.
I believe this charger is safe to use, and safer than the really cheap kind of charger that charges by pairs. The pair kind really can make a battery pop or explode. For extreme example, in a pair type charger, if you put a pair in where one is a rechargeable that has been recharged 100 times and the other one is a brand new fresh rechargeable getting its first recharge, it will start charging but I would even bet that one battery will pop.
Or if you put a pair in where one is a used up alkaline and one is a near full NiMH. That's almost guaranteed to blow in a pair charger, but this charger will handle each battery correctly.
This charger charges each battery independently, and it stops charging when each one battery is "full". It's as safe as you can get, or as safe as some cheap thing from china will be.
If anyone has a AA / AAA charger that must charge by pairs of batteries or two pairs, be safe and throw it away and get this or a better charger.
@ojohn Thanks alot! I was thinking "good something I don't need. I can save some money by not buying" Then you post this and I'm thinking well......maybe I do need it.....
@thismyusername The Amazon Basics batteries are LSD, but in my experience they do not hold their charge as long as Eneloops, especially after six months in a drawer.
I ran them through a condition cycle after I got them, just as I do Eneloops, to make sure they started with a full charge.
I don't regret buying them, and I still use them, but they just aren't as good.
I bought two, and tried both. Both caused the batteries to leak. They did not leak during charging, but afterwards in the plastic storage rack I have. Yes, I did follow the instructions and only recharge partially discharged batteries, no completely discharged ones.
I agree that having quality pre-charged Eneloop (or Amazon Basics or Tenergy) is the way to go with a quality charger from Lacrosse. If you're going to buy this, I think the key is to understand that it will not work for DEAD batteries only DYING. If you catch it at 10% left, then it'll probably do well. If you wait until the product stops working, then you're better of with pre-charged batteries.
I have noticed that these only work well on higher quality batteries. I tried to use these on the ones I got on meh and they started leaking after I charged them. Not worth acid damage to my gadgets.
I got one of these, and found that the Alkaline batteries only seem to recharge to less than 50% of their original capacity. I put them in a remote control, and they died again after two weeks. Meh.
My charged stopped working the other day. When i put in a battery I don't get any lights. How do I get a replacement? I see under warranty is says "90 Day Harvest Direct" but when I go to that website I don't see anything about a warranty for mighty charger.
@Billybubba If you are wanting to order the battery chargers, they have expired. This website sells one item each day for 24 hours starting at 12am EDT. However, items may be repeated on another day, or you might find them on morningsave.com.
Specs
Condition: New
Warranty: 90 Day Harvest Direct
Estimated Delivery: 10/28 - 10/30
Shipping: $5 or free with VMP
What’s in the Box?
2x Mighty Charger
2x User Manual
Pictures
Retail boxes
Chargers charging
Chargers not charging
Side view
Price Comparison
$19.80 (For 2) at Amazon
Find a relevant price comparison? Please share it in a comment in this thread
Warranty
90 days
Estimated Delivery
Wednesday, May 11 - Monday, May 16
I would dispose of these, in a dumpster, before opening.
@lichme Got these the last time — months ago. Still work and they're the only 9v ones I've seen (though I've not looked hard). Considering the price of alkaline batteries, it's a decent deal even if one dies in a few years
Meh.
At this point doesn't as seen on TV just mean, please avoid this product?
Perhaps a more appropriate Meh product would be mini battery diapers, for all those potentially embarrassing leaky battery issues...
@mehdaf Yes. I double blame @jaremelz for today's shitty products. After I triple thank her for the rain this evening.
@mehdaf I thought "as seen on TV" meant "promotion designed for folks who are suckers for a deal late at night." Oh wait.
@narfcake Ooh, a little real blame! Go ahead and let loose, after today's rain, I'm well protected.
@RedOak hmmmm, so maybe they should change it to as seen on meh.... But then where to sell such a product when even meh can't sell anymore of them, eBay?
@mehdaf Sell it at Woot! Given the number of times they let shysters pedal counterfeit goods via sponsored "deals", nothing is too shitty for them.
@jaremelz Let it loose? Fine. This might kill @mfladd, though ...
Thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you, and thank you! That covers four new AA California Fleece hoodies I bought at $5.99/ea., two $1.99 woot shirts, and an unworn purple catshirt. Because purple. And cat. And shirt.
@jaremelz Cute kid.
@narfcake
@narfcake I just have to imagine that you don't do laundry but once every year or two...
@narfcake You've goat to be kidding me, what a find!
And never feel sheepish about making @mfladd miserable, it's fun!
@chellemonkey I won't run out of shirts, but I'd run out of shorts/pants, socks, and underwear well before.
@jaremelz It's a miss-and-hit, really. Just t-shirts alone, there usually between 200 and 2500 in a given thrift store ... and 99.9+% are ignorable.
The hoodies were a great find, and I was only looking because it started raining. It's supposed to get into 90+ the next few days.
@narfcake Most of my shopping is at goodwill. I really don't like looking like everyone else out there, so it provides the wardrobe I prefer!
For when your house isn't burnt down enough.
Tease.
@Thumperchick they cant mess with Twofer Tuesday. Shes like a national treasure! Besides...if they didnt i wouldnt have something to write on the product page...
@Thumperchick
@studerc You'd live without your dirty temptress. For the prize. Especially if they did 2 fuku Tuesday...
@Thumperchick Twofer Fukus just doesnt make sense. I mean, I wouldnt complain...but it just doesnt seem right. Be ready for Wednesday or Thursday.
@studerc Hey, aren't you the one that . . . never mind.
@KDemo :) Good catch. Also, yes.
Bet you'll get a charge out of this
@AttyVette I wouldn't waste my disposable income on this.
A disposable battery charger good for one recharge seems rather pointless.
Do they charge my leaky batteries from the last sale?
Not only do these not work well, they're also a safety hazard.
It's not even that good of a deal.....terrible not even close to meh.
In before 'I was expecting a fukubukuro because of the newsletter' comment.
@jjohns71 Wasn't even a newsletter. Just an email saying they should do a newsletter.
@jjohns71 God dammit.
@kyanostiger who reads email nowadays? Just the subject + about 12 words is what the kids are doing now.
@jjohns71 Sorry, I stopped reading right after you said
@jjohns71 I posted it a few comments up... in gif form.
@tsm tl; - oh, nevermind.
This isn't a fukubukuro! Congratulations, Meh, you raised my hopes by doing nothing and still dashed them quite expertly.
@Tukaro Because that wasn't a newsletter, thus this isn't a fuku... besides could you see them doing a two for tuesday fuku? (grin)
@Kidsandliz newsletter ? i didn't get a newsletter.
ETA nevermind. Found it in my junk mail next to an ad for Breast enhancement.
@Kidsandliz That's just the kind of wacky stunt I would expect from a company that calls itself "mediocre". People would never expect it! Unless they sent out a newsletter! And they sent out a newsletter... I.O.U....
...and still I hoped.
@Tukaro Well so did I actually...
Which, of course makes, if you buy this then you don't need to stock up when they have their gabillion AA battery sales... Smart meh - undercut another staple you sell LOL
@Kidsandliz What's crappier - this or the leaky batteries?
@narfcake don't know - haven't bought either. I have a very nice battery charger with very nice rechargeable batteries already so no need.
@Kidsandliz I bought a very nice battery charger with very nice rechargeable batteries, and when they got weak, my wife threw them away...so I have a very nice battery charger.
@Kyser_Soze So buy some more nice rechargeable batteries...
I got these last time. I used one once, but the loss of battery capacity made it not worth the trouble. That and not trusting it to be charging overnight.
my gf just made me throw away some torn jeans. we need to get this re-fraying technology working ASAP
Aww iadd salt then u can have a salt and battery .. Not a good thing
Is this like something you give to someone you don't like?
@ceagee Why would you merely give it to them when, instead, you can sell a pair of them for $12?
Have two of these, they work great on all those alkaline kid toy batteries as long as they aren't completely dead! Well worth the $6 each!
Well fuck, Tuesday already? Here we go again as we find ourselves at the corner of impulsivity and temptation as we near that janky ass pawn shop on the wrong side of town. Oddly enough...Twofer Tuesday is absent...but there was a note. "Went to the dump to find old batteries...dumbasses just throw those fuckers away. I have the power now to restore life where life was once gone. I'm a mighty motherfucking sorcerer!"
...Calm the fuck down Twofer...they are just batteries and you don't even live in a house to burn down.
@studerc What you live in your car? In a tent? Trust me on this though - tents burn down. When I worked for outward bound in Scotland an instructor managed to do just that while he was in the tent. Saved his hiking boots and sleeping bag and the rest was a flash in the pan (fortunately in the snow).
Careful, @studerc. You might get knifed or speakerdocked walking in that neighborhood.
Did Glen just wink at me?!?
Got one last time. It works but so far only 3 4 charges and battery is toast...
With a reputation among Fire Investigators everywhere.
It isn't the charge that's the concern, it's how long it lasts the second time around.. Then the third and if there's such a thing, the fourth. Also when I had one of these (not this brand) it required that once recharged (1) it be used in the same do-dad that ran it down the first time and (2) placed in the same positions.. Now tell me, how many out there even pays attention to the order they're placed so long as they lay negative to positive and I'm not about to color code the buggers.. Hey! Wait! how 'bout selling a color coder that will actually stick to the battery without rubbing off as you put them in or pull them back out?
Scientific American article: "One of the necessary conditions for a battery to be rechargeable is that the underlying chemical changes that occur during an electrical discharge from the cell must be efficiently reversed when an opposite electrical potential is applied across the cell." It must then be able to sustain this process efficiently and safely over many charging cycles for a battery to be labeled rechargeable.
While your typical alkaline battery has a reversible chemical process it performs more poorly with each charge. "In the case of the nonrechargeable battery," writes Frank McLarnon in Scientific American, "when one attempts to recharge the battery by reversing the direction of electron current flow, at least one of the electrochemical oxidation-reduction reactions is not reversible." The result is a lossy charge. And this assumes that a buildup of hydrogen gas in the reverse process hasn't caused the battery to rupture.
@mmaghakian So what you're saying is this is a cheap hydrogen generator?
@mmaghakian.. They'll also warn you (in a small disclaimer) not to over-charge them (don't charge unattended over night) else they might blow up so now you gotta keep your eyeballs on 'em while their charging.. Too much hassle.
@djslack I am not saying anything, scientific american is
@unkabob Better cover those eyeballs to protect 'em while they're charging!
@Kyser_Soze .. I use a mustard gas mask (doesn't everybody?).
@mmaghakian
@mmaghakian full article "How do rechargeable (that is, zinc-alkaline or nickel-cadmium) batteries work and what makes the reactions reversible in some batteries, but not in others?" from October 21, 1999
Now, the real question is what chemistry, exactly, does meh! sell in their get-a-crate-cheap battery extravaganzas?
@mwarren Here's the more relevant portion of the article:
I had a charger like this, but big enough to accommodate D batteries, when I was a kid. It didn't restore batteries back like they were new, but you could use it multiple times and squeeze a bunch more juice out of them. I loved it. It was great for the hundreds of hours I put on Mario Golf and Dr. Mario on the old Game Boy.
But now that I make my own money? Not worth the hassle (and the unreliability) to save a buck here and there. But at this price, it may be worth experimenting with for people who run through a lot of batteries, don't need long-life reliability, and are okay with more frequent battery changes.
Perfect for the arsonist or insurance fraud artist in YOU!
@Donborvio and there goes my plausible deniability.
@Donborvio They charge batteries just fine. The batteries just leak afterwards.
I cannot speak for this brand of these things.
Buuuuuttt ;) the concept of extending the life of an alkaline battery does work if you recharge it before it is more than about 15% drained and if you don't recharge them too often.
Do it to a battery that is too drained and it won't add charge. Dead is dead, or rather too dead is not going to recharge.
Do it too many times and it will make a mess. I've never had one leak with only five recharges, but I have had them leak after eight cycles (though only with Duracells).
@baqui63.. Yeah, the warning on duracells states, 'Do not Recharge'.. (don't know why but it's there).
@baqui63 I had one leak during the first charge. It was probably "dead dead" though.
So, if I wasn't up already, which I usually am anyways but often not at midnight on Tuesday (or is that really Monday? Confused). But. IF I were still awake, which I am, it would behoove me to never miss a "From Meh! It's Mid Night...Live!" since with the reality of the middle age can drag a person's psyche down to a Meh's level easily. And yet, it is with trepidation and an anxiousness that I sit begging for the next comment that will send giggles down my spine and up my, we'll never mind. It's with a sigh that I notice the clock ticking and my nice cpr or cpa or cna or "keeper" as I call them (in my head only so they don't notice if I pee myself with a laugh out loud emoticon) heading towards me because jollyousness is not allowed once the Slipper disengages from her front left foot... Meaning 11:58pm. So long from my world but don't stop on my account.
@grammycakes - You deserve a jolly keeper. Do you need us to send in a cheer up team?
I looked at the Amazon reviews, but all I could do was try to figure out if they were fake. I may never buy anything again. oh well
Why would you put toothpaste back in the tube? Is getting it contained on the toothbrush too hard?
@tomatoflyer Maybe rechargable toothpaste?
"If the dying Duracells in our wireless keyboard can go from 9% power to 100%"
That look suspiciously close to a product claim.
This thing has two decent things in its favor.
1) It charges rechargeable batteries too, not just "alkaline". It charges NiCd or NiMH rechargeables and should do a decent job with those.
2) It will charge batteries individually, that means you can charge ONE battery, and presumably it stops charging each one battery when that battery is as full as it can take. Really cheap chargers charge by pairs, sending 3 volts of charge into a pair, which is not good and can damage both batteries in the pair when one battery is healthier than the other. And you can mix alkaline, NiCd, NiMH at one time to charge, and AAs and AAAs, since each charges independently.
3) It's about as small as an independent cell charger can be. Yeah that's three.
Carry on.
@ojohn I see no reason to think this will stop once a battery is charged. It's possible, but you'd think they would advertise that fact, and the warning not to overcharge batteries United the opposite.
@craigthom Where is this warning to not overcharge batteries in this? Where's any warning about charging overnight or anything like that?
Its own instruction sheet says that if a full battery is placed in it, it won't charge it. It has circuitry that keeps a test on each battery - that is why it can recharge alkaline, NiCd, and NiMH - each can hold a different amount of charge, then this charger stops charging each "full" cell and shows that one as full even if there are three more still charging. Lots of more expensive chargers do this, this seems to be the cheapest one that can do this for each cell individually. Note that "full" doesn't mean as full as if it was a new battery, just "full" meaning that's all the charge it can hold any more. Even rechargeable batteries lose total capacity with multiple recharging cycles.
I believe this charger is safe to use, and safer than the really cheap kind of charger that charges by pairs. The pair kind really can make a battery pop or explode. For extreme example, in a pair type charger, if you put a pair in where one is a rechargeable that has been recharged 100 times and the other one is a brand new fresh rechargeable getting its first recharge, it will start charging but I would even bet that one battery will pop.
Or if you put a pair in where one is a used up alkaline and one is a near full NiMH. That's almost guaranteed to blow in a pair charger, but this charger will handle each battery correctly.
This charger charges each battery independently, and it stops charging when each one battery is "full". It's as safe as you can get, or as safe as some cheap thing from china will be.
If anyone has a AA / AAA charger that must charge by pairs of batteries or two pairs, be safe and throw it away and get this or a better charger.
@ojohn Thanks alot! I was thinking "good something I don't need. I can save some money by not buying" Then you post this and I'm thinking well......maybe I do need it.....
Oh, I forgot to mention the rejuvenating flat soda...
I built a home carbonation system (think Sodastream but much more useful and not so expensive) basically from this article: http://www.popsci.com/diy/article/2012-06/how-make-your-own-home-carbonation-system
I mostly make my own seltzer but I've also carbonated wine and various liquors and spirits, as well as recarbonating soda and beer.
So... no time machine needed for that one.
Just get some Eneloops you cheapskates.
@skymeat also consider amazon basics (eneloops in a different skin)
http://www.amazon.com/AmazonBasics-Rechargeable-Batteries-8-Pack-Pre-charged/dp/B00CWNMV4G
http://www.amazon.com/AmazonBasics-High-Capacity-Rechargeable-Batteries-Pre-charged/dp/B00HZV9WTM
@thismyusername The Amazon Basics batteries are LSD, but in my experience they do not hold their charge as long as Eneloops, especially after six months in a drawer.
I ran them through a condition cycle after I got them, just as I do Eneloops, to make sure they started with a full charge.
I don't regret buying them, and I still use them, but they just aren't as good.
PSA: AVOID THIS PRODUCT
I bought two, and tried both. Both caused the batteries to leak. They did not leak during charging, but afterwards in the plastic storage rack I have.
Yes, I did follow the instructions and only recharge partially discharged batteries, no completely discharged ones.
This.... makes me seriously doubt my judgement buying yesterday's rope lights.
I bought these last time. They really work well. You need to make sure the batteries aren't too dead.
Wait. Why would i want more battery chargers? Nice they're disposable though.
Totally off-topic - but I love Google """Ad Sense""" - 'cause this makes so much sense....
@Pufferfishy AdSense is based more off of your browsing history than current page content, though.
@Thumperchick then this should be naked, oiled midgets
@Pufferfishy I think there's a way for meh to limit the parental rating on ads shown here, leaving your nude midget oil ads off the front page.
@Thumperchick Meh: thinking of the children
I agree that having quality pre-charged Eneloop (or Amazon Basics or Tenergy) is the way to go with a quality charger from Lacrosse. If you're going to buy this, I think the key is to understand that it will not work for DEAD batteries only DYING. If you catch it at 10% left, then it'll probably do well. If you wait until the product stops working, then you're better of with pre-charged batteries.
If the batteries in my Solar panel garden lights are compatible, then I will get them. They need a bump.
@cfg83 Hey me, those garden light batteries are NiCads, so get it!
@cfg83 Ok me! Thanks!
@cfg83
I have noticed that these only work well on higher quality batteries. I tried to use these on the ones I got on meh and they started leaking after I charged them. Not worth acid damage to my gadgets.
@kylejwilke The Fuji batteries? Those leaked on their own.
I got one of these, and found that the Alkaline batteries only seem to recharge to less than 50% of their original capacity. I put them in a remote control, and they died again after two weeks. Meh.
My charged stopped working the other day. When i put in a battery I don't get any lights. How do I get a replacement? I see under warranty is says "90 Day Harvest Direct" but when I go to that website I don't see anything about a warranty for mighty charger.
@ryanmc if you scroll to the bottom of that page, you'll see a button for their CS. Try emailing them at: customerservice@harvestdirect.com
@Thumperchick I sent a request on Monday. It is now Friday. How long should it take for them to respond?
@ryanmc shouldn't take that this long. :/
New here. How do I order?
New here. How do I order
@Billybubba If you are wanting to order the battery chargers, they have expired. This website sells one item each day for 24 hours starting at 12am EDT. However, items may be repeated on another day, or you might find them on morningsave.com.
Today’s item is https://meh.com/forum/topics/10-pack-assorted-uv-protected-sunglasses