Of third-party PSP batteries
We came across this Korean PSP fansite, Ruliweb, which has conducted a few interesting tests on third-party PSP batteries with some not so good results.
According to the rough web translation of the site, the guys from Ruliweb tested three different third-party batteries: one at 2200mAh and two others at 2600mAh. The official Sony batteries come in 1800mAh and 200mAh packs.
Apparently, the testers discovered that all of the third-party batteries underperformed, giving out less juice than they were advertised for. “The 2200mAh battery actually produced 2000mAh of power,” posted PSP-Vault, “while the two 2600mAh batteries only produced roughly 1550mAh of power.”
Now, here’s the most interesting thing. Ruliweb’s test results page shows an image of a melted PSP. It seems that they managed to destroy a PSP during the tests. It seems they’re really serious in peering into the dependability and safety of these third-party PSP batteries, let’s all hope they yield good results.
Via Ruliweb
We came across this Korean PSP fansite, Ruliweb, which has conducted a few interesting tests on third-party PSP batteries with some not so good results.
According to the rough web translation of the site, the guys from Ruliweb tested three different third-party batteries: one at 2200mAh and two others at 2600mAh. The official Sony batteries come in 1800mAh and 200mAh packs.
Apparently, the testers discovered that all of the third-party batteries underperformed, giving out less juice than they were advertised for. “The 2200mAh battery actually produced 2000mAh of power,” posted PSP-Vault, “while the two 2600mAh batteries only produced roughly 1550mAh of power.”
Now, here’s the most interesting thing. Ruliweb’s test results page shows an image of a melted PSP. It seems that they managed to destroy a PSP during the tests. It seems they’re really serious in peering into the dependability and safety of these third-party PSP batteries, let’s all hope they yield good results.
Via Ruliweb