What's the difference between the NB-2L and the NB-2LH
How much difference is there between the Canon battery and clones - there's
certainly a price difference - about 1000%...
Thanks
There are solar powered charging solutions you might want to look at.
There is at least one day sack that has photo cell panels on it.
I am sure there will be some one who does a charger that would be
powered from the push bike?
Worth looking at because no matter how many batteries you have THE SHOT
always comes just as the last one dies. :-)
--
\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\
\/\/\/\/\ Chris Hills Staffs England /\/\/\/\/
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I am not familiar with Canon batteries, but as a matter of prudence I trust
the quality control provided by the manufacturer. Even though there is a
large price difference, can the difference equal the cost of your trip or
the importance of your shots. With a battery you want reliability and little
latent leakage. It boils down to are you willing to take a risk?
YMMV
--
Peter
> I dunno about you and your risk, but I don't believe there are battery
> manufactures for each individual battery operate item. So, there may be
> some better or worse battery manufacture's, but not many of them to risk
> your hard earned $$$$ for the same thing.
>
> Few years ago, the battery of HP laptop got recalled because it can
> explode. So, YES it's fine to pay extra for a pieace of mind and help
> with
> the economy, but in other hand it's safed to save quite a bit of $$$$ and
> still can enjoy the saving and good photos too.
You may be lucky. I agree that there are not many battery manufacturers.
However, most do random testing from production batches. As a result of the
testing batteries are classified and the highest grades usually are sold
with the OEM label.
Those not sold with that label are sold to others. Yes, you may get an off
brand that is excellent. It's a risk I prefer not to take.
In the HP case you mentioned, this article may interest you.
http://www.infoworld.com/article/03/12/19/50OPreality_1.html
I prefer to gamble at the casinos where I know the odds.
--
Peter
Thanks for your comments guys, seems like the jury is out for a definitive
answer.
I had a look on Amazon, and:
Canon NB-2LH is £36,
Powerplanet equivalent is £4.50, with £4.50 postage (and seemingly good
customer reviews)
I think I may go for two of the latter.
A place I consult for uses 3rd party also. They have had some awful
production tie-ups and toner spill incidents. I doubt the money they save is
worth the down time, but they are convinced they save money.
>
>> In the HP case you mentioned, this article may interest you.
>> http://www.infoworld.com/article/03/12/19/50OPreality_1.html
>
> Have you realized that the link above is the article in 2003, and I am
> talking about the newer on (I heard on Radio and TV) in around 2006 or
> early
> 2007 or so.
Yes.
Just thought it would provide an explanation of why batteries explode.
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Peter
There are crappy batteries coming from Asia and LiON batteries can
catch fire and/or explode. I'd buy 3rd party batteries from dealers
that have a reputation to maintain but I wouldn't buy them over eBay,
for instance.
--
Al Dykes
News is something someone wants to suppress, everything else is advertising.
- Lord Northcliffe, publisher of the Daily Mail
The NB-2L is powerful enough to use in a Powershot S50, but not in a 400D.
Since we have both types of camera in our house, I pay attention to such
things!
: How much difference is there between the Canon battery and clones - there's
: certainly a price difference - about 1000%...
The clones that B&H sells are actually a bit more powerful than the NB-2LH and
are much cheaper. (But not by nearly as much as you claim above - knock a zero
off of that number.) Do they last as long? Who cares? You can compensate by
buying more of them and still come out ahead.
Bob
That battery recall eventually extended to Dell and one or two other computer
manufacturers. IIRC, the battery manufacturer was, in all cases, Sony.
Bob
This included Apple MAC's
AFAIK all the batteries were replaced FOC
> the battery manufacturer was, in all cases, Sony.
Ironically Sony used different batteries in their laptops!