NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
.......
i havent had a chance to buy one and now my chance is gone >>_<<
Sony, where's the justice? How could you mercilessly kill the nine month old PSP Extended Life Battery Kit -- capable of boosting the PSP's play time by up to 80% -- while UMDs continue to be the preferred method of distribution for the system's games and video content (thereby also heavily contributing to the device's juice-drain)? Worse still for Sony, why are we not surprised?
http://www.engadget.com/2008/08/09/s...e-battery-kit/
NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
.......
i havent had a chance to buy one and now my chance is gone >>_<<
I dont see the point in using a 2200mah battery when you can just get one of these which hold 9800mah. I have one and they are fantastic, not only in price but the amount they hold.
http://www.colordrives.com/charger-f...p-battery.html
Mine lasts 12 hours+ easy, and you can run it either directly through the AC or you can recharge your current battery a good few times with it. I think its better to run it direct, since the LED will tell you if its running low on power.
I dont see why you think its fake, its not like 9800mah is a great deal of power, you can get any old battery aslong as its 5v and wire it up.
Edit: They also now do a 12000mah.
Last edited by IDidMyTime; August 9th, 2008 at 20:53.
From that linked page:
Firstly:
# Input voltage: 5V
# Output voltage: 5V, 700mAh
# Emergency charger 9800mAh 4 in 1 for PSP/NDS Lite/NDS/GBA SP
700mAh???
Then just under that:
Input voltage: 5V
Output voltage: 700mAh
mA is a rating of current, not voltage.
mAh is a measure of capacity, not current flow at a chosen time, and not voltage.
I'm sure its a mistake and they mean 700mA maximum current draw (compared to 2000mA from the AC charger or 100-500mA from a USB port) from a 9800mAh battery but its those kind of dodgy signs that make me steer clear of these kinds of things.
LiPo in poor packaging without decent regulation can be a bad thing.
1) It makes the PSP much more annoying to carry.
2) Its probably a lithium polymer battery in cheap casing, good luck with that...... At least its not being put inside the system like those 'MAX' extended batteries.
3)The PSP's charging port was designed for a constant stream of power at 5v, not a battery that drops in both amps and volts as it runs flat.
4) If you rated it, I could almost guarantee it would not suppply 9800mAh, just as virtually all high-rated after market batteries do not.
The sony version was the most reliable and hassle free way of getting a real (same physical size, lithium ion) replacement battery with a bit more life. It sucks they have stopped producing them.
It's hard as hell to find even standard official batteries in Australia without ordering them directly over the phone from sony support.
You will see a LOT of rip-off 'Stamina' (the ones pictured in the story) batteries advertised online very cheap. They are fake and crap.
I've seen batteries opened up to find a $#@!ty cell and a weight to make it feel like its a better battery.
Last edited by bah; August 10th, 2008 at 05:30.
More than likely, Sony has simply developed a smaller version, the same size as the Slim battery.
Methinks the real goal here is to get everyone away from the slightly-easier-to-crack PSP 1000 model and fat batteries.
Death knell for the PSP 1000?
I still get 3-4 hours of homebrew on 2nd lowest brightness level from my Australian launch PSP 1000 that has been used quite a lot. I would say they have a fair bit of life left in them yet
I was just looking for an official stamina battery a while back, even the sony store (bricks n mortar) didn't have any official PSP batteries.
Phoned sony Australia and even they did not have stamina ones, but I could order standard 1800mA ones through them.
I think I saw one of these packs (with the face plate for slim psps) in a store just after their release, but it was really overpriced.
Last edited by bah; August 10th, 2008 at 10:12.
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