I got my hands on an old Multimeter. Changed the Batteries and was surprised to find to empty but otherwise completely intact 30 year old batteries inside. (The company „Horten“ was bought in 1994, also the price is still in D-Mark and not in Euro)
I got my hands on an old Multimeter. Changed the Batteries and was surprised to find to empty but otherwise completely intact 30 year old batteries inside. (The company „Horten“ was bought in 1994, also the price is still in D-Mark and not in Euro)
I never understood why these types of batteries are called “baby cells” when they are obviously much bigger then the common AA or AAA cells.
Because they are closer in size to a baby
See what your silliness produces!?
I had to look it up after that zinger. It is from a “baby flashlight” and the name just stuck with C batteries for awhile because that is what they were mostly used for.
Cunningham’s law babyyyy
(I just like being silly)