You've proven already that if you use/abuse batteries other than how they are intended and without knowledge, that even a tool battery with safety mechanisms in place can be set on fire. Hence my recommendation for lead acid, for your safety.
I recall waiting in line at a parking garage while two guys were trying to jump start their car. When I saw the guy connect red to the negative battery terminal, I put my car in reverse without hesitation. I just made it far enough to not get hit by the geysers of acid shooting out of both batteries. I don't think the guy got hit, but he was jumping around in a panic until the geysers stopped. It was sort of funny after the fact since there were no injuries, but scary when it happened.Lead acid batteries can splash you with sulfuric acid if you goof around with them. They can throw bits of molten metal if you short them.
Best stick with potato batteries.
BS
yes I get the fire battery is more power and a bit cheaper
EVERY WHERE BOTH NEW AND USED
real world I feel safer with less fire dangers
and really feel some here are playing with fire
and REGULATION TO FORCE FULL DISCLOSURE IS NEEDED
AS I ONLY WANT FeP VERSIONS
Lithium ion is the chemistry.REFUND CAME THRU
so no real loss
now the posted link to LG's PDF
HAS NO NONE ZIP CHEMISTRY DATA
only said li no real chemistry for the fire cell I own and wanted chemistry data
as did several other LG PDF's on other cells
lots of el data zip for what is in the cell beyond Li something we ain;t telling you
Well for battery packs using lithium cells, only a few chemistries are used, and common names are used when selling to the consumer. While they all may be "lithium-ion" based, which type is marketed to the consumer using terms like Lithium ion, LiFePO4, LiPO, etc.ok we seem to have basic disagreement
has I see hiding behind Li as not saying the chemistry of fire cells
as both LiFePO and the (lithium nickel manganese) chemistry could be Li
I guess the few makers of the LiFePO packs will tell you they use the LiFePO
in their ads while the fire cell guys will claim Li only
never list (lithium nickel manganese) aka fire cells any where in there ads
Contrarian, I respect that. My contrariness is against cars, an actual hazard despite being every normie's first worst resort. But you can pick your battles, rational or not.not a fire fighter so no
if I was I would be
This must really outrage you. Nowhere on the packaging does Duracell show the battery chemistry. They don't even say Alkaline-Manganese-Dioxide.not a fire fighter so no
if I was I would be
exactly why we use diesel on sail boatsContrarian, I respect that. My contrariness is against cars, an actual hazard despite being every normie's first worst resort. But you can pick your battles, rational or not.
Maybe go get something full of gasoline and feel safe from accidental battery fire.
My guess is you have a lithium ion battery in the phone in your pocket. Which of course is just as safe as the one in an e-car.
exactly why we use diesel on sail boats
and the same sailors say never use car packs with fire cells on boats
only safe Li is FeP chemistry