If that's really necessary, it defeats the whole effect of a solar watch. There are watches that run 3-5 years on a simple lithium primary cell, IIRC some Casio/Seiko models even 10 years.xevious wrote:...The replacement non-rechargeable batteries are rated at around 3-5 years. According to Casio, the rechargeable cell needs replacement every 7 years...
As I wrote in the other thread, I don't know for sure. Battery manufacturers always warn to never charge a primary, but of course they play it safe (and for obvious reasons have no interest in their batteries being recharged).xevious wrote:Of course, that's their estimate on the older 726R and 920R... so perhaps the MT920 would last much longer. In any case, the cost difference is huge. I'd rather use a non-rechargeable at $0.59 a piece, as long as I can find one that won't be harmed by the trickle charge coming from the solar cells. Do you think it would be OK to use the 371 (1.5v low drain) cell?
However, it is known that Alkalines CAN be recharged with low current, but I never tried it with button cells. It works best when they're not yet fully discharged - and that's exactly what happens in a solar watch
I read somewhere that recharging does NOT work with Silver Oxide (AgO) batteries. The 371 you mention COULD be AgO (depending on manufacturer and battery chart...). AG6 or LR69 are the same, but definitely Alkaline.

