Question:
Digital SLR's and their batteries?
Patty
2010-03-05 22:04:54 UTC
I'm shooting a Nikon D90
and I recently bought a battery grip.

The OEM battery for the Nikon D90
is the Nikon EN-EL3e Li-ion 7.4v 15mAh.

I was looking to replace it with a third party battery designed for the Nikon D90.
It seems to have a similar description.
Replacement for Nikon EN-EL3e Li-ion 7.4v 18mAh.

as you see it has a 1800mAh rating compared to the OEM 1500.

is this bad for my camera? in any way?




here is the link to the battery.
http://www.emartcentral.com/batt-en-el3e-d300.html?gclid=CPrSs5a3o6ACFSpeagodMlwzag
Four answers:
lordsmurf
2010-03-05 22:12:43 UTC
Do yourself a favor and don't buy the generic batteries. The lifetimes on those things tends to be less than a year of use. On the other hand, you can shoot with real Nikon batteries for quite a few years before they start to lose charge.



$23 (total with shipping) for the fake battery vs $39 for the quality battery: http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000BYCKU8?ie=UTF8&tag=thdifa-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=B000BYCKU8

I'd call it an extra $16 well spent.



.
Sick of trolls
2010-03-05 22:20:01 UTC
The blue guy is right, kinda. (:



I'm not a big fan of third party batteries, especially for newer Nikons. Nikon changed a bit in their newer cameras (how the camera checks the battery level) and I've found generics that work great in a D80 always register dead on a D90 or D300. That seems to be a bigger problem than not really holding a charge, although really cheap generics tend to have more power problems.



I'd suggest using the real Nikon batteries. You'll have less need to worry about if the camera working.
philo
2016-12-14 12:36:47 UTC
The charger might have its enter voltage marked on a label and beneficial additionally interior the practise e book. it is common for chargers and different capability furnish instruments offered interior the united kingdom and Europe to settle for assorted enter voltages. yet america has a tendency to be slightly isolationist and countless electric powered issues bought over there won't artwork over right here without some form of transformer. this protects their manufacturers some money whilst they are making capability instruments. it style of feels as in the journey that your charger is seeing two times the mains voltage that this is anticipating and has close down. this could be a short lived thermal shrink out, or it would desire to have blown an inner fuse. If this is temporary then a 230 to a hundred and ten volt vehicle transformer will make it artwork lower back. interior the worst case challenge the charger has sent too lots to the digicam, temporarily earlier it close down, and broken it. that is why the "one length suits all" charger would not artwork. the excellent concern which you will do is to take digicam and charger to a Sony substantial broker/authorized repairer, and function them examine it excited approximately you. seem on your nearest authorized repairer on the Sony internet web site.
selina_555
2010-03-06 00:47:37 UTC
I have bought several cheap generic batteries over the years, from different sources, for a number of different Canon DSLRs.



Perhaps I have been unusually lucky, but I found that each one of those batteries lasted for a VERY long time (i.e. years), and performed just as well (per charge) as the Canon ones for MUCH less dollars.



I wouldn't hesitate to buy another generic one, but YOUR mileage may vary.


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