9

My mouse rating is 1.5V, I've been using it with alkaline AAA batteries which provide 1.5V. My question is, if I have a 1.2V rechargeable battery, is it going to work anyways without issues? I'm just concerned the 0.3 Volts difference will damage something over time.

Thank you,

Matias.

Matias
  • 201

3 Answers3

5

Your 1.2V rechargeable battery should work perfectly well.

An alkaline battery starts of with a terminal voltage somewhere between 1.5 - 1.6 Vdc which decays as the battery is discharged. End of life is a terminal voltage somewhere between 0.7 - 1.0 Vdc (depends on the equipment using the battery).

Your 1.2V rechargeable cell starts off with a terminal voltage around 1.2 Vdc which remains fairly constant as the cell discharges. Only when the cell charge is exhausted does the terminal voltage drop significantly.

2

Had same question ... I tried 1.2 volt rechargeable battery and it is working perfectly fine. Go ahead and start using that rechargeable battery it will be a little help to environment.

sandip
  • 21
1

I can't be 100% sure without having the exact model and schematic but my best guess would be: there's no problem in using a 1.2V when it's rated for a 1.5V battery. The reason is that I'm pretty sure the mouse has a boost or any other switching power supply that increases the input voltage to any voltage needed by internal circuitry to work. The only downside on using a smaller voltage battery is that you might experience a shorter operation life. But, anyway, as the battery is rechargeable, that's not a problem. You might need to recharge it more often than replacing an ordinary disposable battery. Hope it helps clarifying the issue.

Just to feed your curiosity you might read: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boost_converter