Stan Hesketh
Well-Known Member
Nothing new here, but just posting as it might help somebody.
I recently acquired and resurrected a Praktica SLR. It is designed to use the old mercury batteries which are now banned I believe. There are alkaline batteries that fit, but they are higher voltage and require the lens to be stopped down a couple of stops to compensate.
My hearing aids use Zinc Air batteries which are about 1.35 volts and very similar characteristics to the old mercury cells. They are however a much smaller diameter. I visited the "lucky dip" box in the shed and found some plastic spacers off a computer that I once modified. The battery was a perfect fit inside the tube, so I was able to saw a short length off and insert the hearing aid battery inside the short tube. It works a treat and keeps the battery central in the chamber. The hearing aid batteries that I use are the "orange label" type and are extremely cheap to buy. I am told that a rubber "O ring" as used in engineering works well, too. A tap washer would be another likely contender, or a piece of wooden dowel drilled to suit. I could have gone mad and bought an adapter, but it would have cost more than the camera
I need to make one for my old and trusty Chinon CS tomorrow.
Hope this helps somebody.
I recently acquired and resurrected a Praktica SLR. It is designed to use the old mercury batteries which are now banned I believe. There are alkaline batteries that fit, but they are higher voltage and require the lens to be stopped down a couple of stops to compensate.
My hearing aids use Zinc Air batteries which are about 1.35 volts and very similar characteristics to the old mercury cells. They are however a much smaller diameter. I visited the "lucky dip" box in the shed and found some plastic spacers off a computer that I once modified. The battery was a perfect fit inside the tube, so I was able to saw a short length off and insert the hearing aid battery inside the short tube. It works a treat and keeps the battery central in the chamber. The hearing aid batteries that I use are the "orange label" type and are extremely cheap to buy. I am told that a rubber "O ring" as used in engineering works well, too. A tap washer would be another likely contender, or a piece of wooden dowel drilled to suit. I could have gone mad and bought an adapter, but it would have cost more than the camera
I need to make one for my old and trusty Chinon CS tomorrow.
Hope this helps somebody.