Monday, February 27, 2012

IEC battery nomenclature

Battery categories

IEC classification classifies batteries according to their accepted actualization and all-embracing concrete appearance. These categories, however, are not articular in the IEC array number. 7

Category 1: Cylindrical beef with bulging absolute and recessed or collapsed abrogating terminals. The absolute terminal shall be concentric with the corpuscle overall. The absolute acme of the corpuscle is not necessarily the aforementioned as the absolute ambit amid terminals (This accounts for nubs, belly and array casings). The corpuscle case is insulated. Eg. R1 & LR8D425

Category 2: Cylindrical beef with bulging absolute and bulging or collapsed abrogating terminals. The absolute acme of the corpuscle is the aforementioned as the absolute ambit amid terminals. The corpuscle case is insulated. Eg. CR14250, LR61

Category 3: Cylindrical beef with collapsed absolute and abrogating terminals. The absolute acme of the corpuscle is not necessarily the aforementioned as the absolute ambit amid terminals (This accounts for any protuberances from the abrogating terminal). The corpuscle case is in affiliation with the absolute terminal. No allotment of the corpuscle is accustomed to beetle from the absolute terminal surface. Eg. CR11108, LR9

Category 4: Cylindrical beef with a bulging collapsed abrogating terminal. The absolute acme of the corpuscle is the aforementioned as the absolute ambit amid terminals. The corpuscle case is the absolute terminal and it is recommended that the alien apparent is acclimated for absolute affiliation even admitting it is accessible from the base. No allotment of the corpuscle is accustomed to beetle from the absolute terminal surface. Eg. LR44, CR2032

Category 5: Cylindrical batteries which fit none of the added categories. Eg. R40, 8LR23

Category 6: Non-cylindrical batteries. Eg. 3R12, 4R25, 6F22

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