Hardware comparing capacity of replacement dsi xl batteries in 2024

bellisornot

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here are my results! ill probably test more batteries in the future as im getting a mah tester. sad to see this from ifixit
BATTERIES.jpg
 

mep

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Very interesting thank you. I do not know what you mean exactly by "cycled from 100%" but if I understand correctly you took the cells from 100% charge to 0% before testing.

My understanding is this should not be done with lithium-ion batteries since they will degrade if used at less than 20% charge. We do not need to cycle these batteries like we did with the old alkaline ones. For maximum efficiency lithium batteries should be kept between 20% and 80% of charge.
 
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bellisornot

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Very interesting thank you. I do not know what you mean exactly by "cycled from 100%" but if I understand correctly you took the cells from 100% charge to 0% before testing.

My understanding is this should not be done with lithium-ion batteries since they will degrade if used at less than 20% charge. We do not need to cycle these batteries like we did with the old alkaline ones. For maximum efficiency lithium batteries should be kept between 20% and 80% of charge.
you are very correct, however it is widely speculated that cycling li-ion batteries that have been in storage can essentially clean off a mineral layer that forms from nonuse, giving back a small amount of capacity. it was primarily done to ensure each battery was given the same parameters, charged to 100%, discharged to 0%, then charge back to 100% and begin testing
 

SylverReZ

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My understanding is this should not be done with lithium-ion batteries since they will degrade if used at less than 20% charge. We do not need to cycle these batteries like we did with the old alkaline ones. For maximum efficiency lithium batteries should be kept between 20% and 80% of charge.
If you keep the DS on charge all of the time, then the batteries will degrade quite quickly.

Looks like the iFixIt battery is the same cheap Chinesium one from here: https://www.aliexpress.com/item/32230397582.html
 

mep

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you are very correct, however it is widely speculated that cycling li-ion batteries that have been in storage can essentially clean off a mineral layer that forms from nonuse, giving back a small amount of capacity. it was primarily done to ensure each battery was given the same parameters, charged to 100%, discharged to 0%, then charge back to 100% and begin testing
Thank you for the explanation, I was not aware of this mineral layer.

Should we expect that these DS replacement batteries have been in storage for a long time? Would make sense since not many people would buy this product. Aside from this mineral layer phenomenon which I understand to be reversible, maybe the low capacity of these third-party batteries come from the long storage time?

As a side note, a friend recently bought a brand new Nintendo Switch and it was sitting in the box at 70% capacity so apparently not the best practices from Nintendo.
 

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