Externet Posted October 16 Posted October 16 Hello all. I remember a flashlight in the early eighties designed for astronauts? with a near-zero self-discharge and with guarantee to work after stored for 10 years. Can you remember something about its name, chemistry...? Was sold as a 'high-end' gadget to fancy buyers to brag about it if they did not need a flashlight a decade later... I do not think batteries were removable nor replaceable. Looked like a stubby aluminium cylinder, took a couple of seconds to shine.
StringJunky Posted October 16 Posted October 16 (edited) Possibly silver-zinc batteries by Eagle Picher. That was the portable source on missions, it seems. Found it. The above was for bigger stuff. It was an ACR Model FA-5 Penlight. "Indeed, Lovell notes in a later letter[3] that when he found his Apollo 13 penlight in a drawer in 1981 it still lit up even though the batteries were the original set installed and used 11 years previously." Second one down in link. http://spaceflownartifacts.com/flown_flashlights.html#:~:text=The magnesium flashlight was powered,powering down their stricken spacecraft. N.B. It only had 100 charge-discharge cycles. Edited October 16 by StringJunky
Externet Posted October 16 Author Posted October 16 Thanks. That is a seventies model. The one I remember was like 40mm diameter x 120mm long; silver. Well, I will investigate the silver-zinc side of it...
LaurieAG Posted October 17 Posted October 17 8 hours ago, StringJunky said: "Indeed, Lovell notes in a later letter[3] that when he found his Apollo 13 penlight in a drawer in 1981 it still lit up even though the batteries were the original set installed and used 11 years previously." I have a 1980's Canon F-44 Scientific Calculator that still works on the original batteries. 1
StringJunky Posted October 17 Posted October 17 20 minutes ago, LaurieAG said: I have a 1980's Canon F-44 Scientific Calculator that still works on the original batteries. I always thought there was always some parasitic discharge when left in a device. Clearly, some are better than others.
LaurieAG Posted October 18 Posted October 18 It still performs all of its functions without a hitch, the only noticeable thing is the LCD display is a bit fainter.
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