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this is a great article. i was just struggling with the issue of sony presenting in wH vs mAH and this shows the conversion
only thing the article lacks is some discussion in terms of applications that says why the higher mAH lasts longer but the higher voltage is necessary to power bigger devices and the current limits of batteries available on the retail. the author probably has an understanding that he could share on the website
law
Thu, 18 Aug 2005 21:29:24 -0700
Thanks for your suggestion, law. You made some good points. So I have heeded to at least one of your suggestions by adding "Why is Battery Capacity Specified in Ampere-Hour?" to the article.
Chieh Cheng
Wed, 24 Aug 2005 11:19:23 -0700
Very useful article! i was struggling in my understanding of the relationship of "Ah" & "A". I am converting an old cordless drill to a corded one, and needed to find out the kind of adapter I'd need. I feel stupid, now :)
Karim Chakroun
Mon, 7 Nov 2005 06:24:16 -0800
I think ... Watts=Volts*Amps*0.60 which makes 1000VA=600 W !!! and not 1000Watts !!
Dan
Sun, 11 Dec 2005 09:39:32 -0800
1.The battery for my T7 camera says 1.6 wh, 3.6v.
2.Dividing the 1.6 watts for 1hr by the 3.6 volts: the current deliverd by the battery for 1 hr would be .440 amperes or 440 mili amps at 3.6 volts.
ie:440mah.
bill jones (86 yr old ww2 navy vet).
Sat, 25 Mar 2006 17:31:39 -0800
Hello Mr. Cheng
This article made by you was extremely useful for me. Actually I am mounting CCTV cameras and I needed a simple explanation for power supply wat amp conversion. Thank you again. Keep up your good work... :)
ArkeN
Thu, 13 Jul 2006 17:01:54 -0700
The real unit of battery charge is the Coulomb. mAh is a convenience for easier calculation of how long the battery will last in a walkman/camcorder.
McGyver
Fri, 28 Jul 2006 07:39:08 -0700
1mAh = 0.001A * 3600s = 0.001C/s * 3600s = 3.6C
so just multiply the mAh by 3.6 to get the real charge.
Now tell us how much charge is in an ALKALINE battery.
Jack
Fri, 28 Jul 2006 07:44:41 -0700
Your equations are not expressed correctly, since the "h" terms would cancel.
A better example of the NP-FT1 cell conversion would be:
Sony_NP_FT1_capacity = 2.4 W*h = (2.4 W / 3.6 V) A*h = 0.66 Ah
-----------------------------
A better example of Amp to Milliamp conversion would be more correct if shown as:
In a direct-current circuit, 1 W = 1 V * 1 A.
cell_capacity = 0.66 Ah = 0.66 A*h.
cell_capacity = 0.66 A*(1000 mA/A)*h = 660 mAh.
Gordon
Wed, 07 Feb 2007 18:50:01 -0800
There is a cut & paste error in my 1850 hrs post; the following was intended:
Your equations are not expressed correctly, since the "h" terms would cancel.
A better example of the NP-FT1 cell conversion would be:
In a direct-current circuit, 1 W = 1 V * 1 A.
Sony_NP_FT1_capacity = 2.4 W*h = (2.4 W / 3.6 V) A*h = 0.66 Ah
-----------------------------
A better example of Amp to Milliamp conversion would be more correct if shown as:
cell_capacity = 0.66 Ah = 0.66 A*h.
cell_capacity = 0.66 A*(1000 mA/A)*h = 660 mAh.
Gordon
Wed, 07 Feb 2007 18:55:30 -0800
you cannot simplify this as much as you did as energy (watt hour) is a multiple of voltage, current, and time. The terminal voltage of a battery is not going to stay a constant rated voltage, it is a chemical reaction that degrades overtime. So, the watt hour is more complex then amp hour as the varying voltages are taken into consideration.
Cory
Thu, 04 Oct 2007 02:10:16 +0000
Can you help me convert watts to Amp hours for a battery model HC1217W.
Minette Williams
Mon, 14 Jan 2008 18:04:02 +0000
I did a search online for HC1217W and I saw "CSB HC1217W - 12V 4.5AH SLA Battery" . . . it already says 4.5 AH . . . no conversion needed.
Chieh Cheng
Mon, 14 Jan 2008 21:07:13 +0000
Hey guys.
I presume you all know what you are talking about, but is there a conversion table that would cover a 56Wh?
Tim Parslow
Sat, 23 Jan 2010 02:04:42 +0000
thanks so much, this is so helpful, not sure for camera batteries, but laptops as well, much appreciate it!
erin
Sat, 06 Feb 2010 13:31:50 +0000
By law, Lithium Ion Batteries manufactured after January 1, 2009 are required to be marked with the watt-hour rating. This is due to HAZMAT (hazardous material) shipping purposes as per IATA (International Air Transportation Association).
tom
Fri, 05 Mar 2010 15:43:50 +0000
Thank you very much for this site. A battery vendor sent me a lower capacity battery than they advertised, and I was able to return the one they sent to me, because of what I learned here.
Coston
Mon, 08 Mar 2010 18:18:57 +0000
So if I have a 12v 23w/c battery how do i replace it with battery that is in Ah
Vinesh Prasad
Tue, 09 Mar 2010 00:33:55 +0000
i got what you write but it lakes something that i want to ask and really need your help,my laptop battery is 11.1V,48Wh so it needs 4324.3 mAh,OK?
i saw on e-bay batteries with the same volt but 5200 mAh,that means it is better than the original one and if it ok will the more amperes will affect my laptop
thank you so much and really need your help
mody
Thu, 19 Jan 2012 08:30:02 +0300
The two mAh numbers you quoted are battery capacity. Therefore, the one on eBay holds more charge. Theoretically, that battery will last longer per charge on your laptop computer.
Chieh Cheng
Thu, 19 Jan 2012 13:48:52 +0300
but i am afraid as the one on e-bay with more mAh (more capacity) is cheaper than the standard one with the same volt but less mAh
i want your advice,please
mody
Mon, 23 Jan 2012 07:54:40 +0300
Wh is official unit under transport dangerous goods regulations to determine full or partial regulation when shipping
Len
Sat, 19 Jan 2013 20:52:45 +0300
nice article,so much informative ,get back to you soon with my doubts,thank you
Guruprakash K
Thu, 29 Aug 2013 11:23:29 +0400
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Title: light up an LED with a battery
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Excerpt: what to do for reducing ampere? i want to light up a LED which need only 25ma but every batt. is over this amp. so i have to reduce the amp. thanks mamun
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