Electronic – ny benefit to using a voltage booster (such as Batteriser) on “dead” batteries

batteriesjoule-thiefswitching-regulatorundervoltagevoltage-regulator

The Batteriser [Edit: removed dead, harmful link] is a crowd-funded product intended to extend battery life by boosting the voltage. It is basically a joule thief that is in a tiny package that slips over the cell.

Dave Jones of EEVBlog did a video debunking the product:

Which the Batteriser people responded to with a video of their own:

And a response from Dave:

The latter two videos primarily deal with the Batteriser promo team's failure to understand how to measure voltage provided by batteries under load versus out of circuit. They believe that a power supply is an "unfair" test because it behaves different from batteries, or that skeptics failed to consider battery internal resistance, etc.

While I think it's obvious that the Batteriser people have failed to grasp some basic concepts, I do question whether a joule thief type circuit is a good way to utilize remaining energy in a cell. (Certainly not the 80% that Batteriser claims we throw away.)

Is there any benefit to using a voltage booster on batteries that are below a device's cutoff/operating voltage?

Best Answer

"Is there any benefit to using a voltage booster on batteries that are below a device's cutoff/operating voltage?"

Of course there are benefits in that situation: a battery that would otherwise be dead can still be used for some time. But probably not for long, so it is debatable whether this is usefull.

What DJ (IMO correctly) argues is that the Batteroo claims are wildly exaggerated at best, and the use of their device with batteries that are not yet below the cutoff voltage will lead to some additional energy use, so the overall effect might be negative.