The little AA cell has a higher Amp-hour rating than the big lithium power tool battery - what's that all about? Amp-hours aren't a measure of total energy stored. For that you need to calculate Watt-hours (Volts x Amps x hours).
Ryobi lithium power tool battery: 18 x 1.4 = 25.2 Watt-hours
Sanyo eneloop AA cell: 1.2 x 1.9 = 2.28 Watt-hours
Not surprisingly, the power tool battery has more than 10 times as much stored energy than the AA cell.

By Julian

Youtuber, shed dweller, solar charge controller aficionado

One thought on “1.4ah power tool battery v 1.9ah aa cell – do the maths!”
  1. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Tim Jadeglans says:

    that's why i prefer Wh over Ah. Besides a battery doesn't stay at the same voltage all the time anyway. So Ah becomes…. weird.Especially since in at least my applications uses the same wattage regardless of input voltage.

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