Murphy's law - whenever you need them urgently you don't have, so you get ripped off! buy now, hoard them and try dig them out when you need them.
most car fobs use these batteries
cheap as you can see!
hope you catch some! buy in advance of needing.
ABOUT THIS PRODUCT
Panasonic Lithium coin cell batteries. Safety instructions: Keep coin-sized button batteries out of sight and out of the reach of children. Coin lithium batteries that can cause serious injury when swallowed.
Pack of 6 batteries.
Safety instructions: Keep coin-sized button batteries out of sight and reach of children. Coin lithium batteries can cause serious injury when swallowed. For more information, please visit Energizer & Duracell websites.
EAN: 5410853043836.
All comments (23)
amendasun
18 Sep 17#1
Thanks op
abdndamo
18 Sep 17#2
I used to sell this and lr44s at school back in the 90s for tamagotchies and scientific calculators. Our tag line was 'We Sell, Wee Cell Batteries'. Sold them for £1. A nice earner for a teenager at the time.
donaldmcgill2
18 Sep 17#3
sold out in Glasgow
diablo07
18 Sep 17#4
go to a poundland shop and get the same for a £1 permanently
gazdoubleu to diablo07
18 Sep 17#6
That's like comparing apples with oranges the poundland one's are nowhere near the same quality
wobster to gazdoubleu
18 Sep 17#7
Maybe back in the day of the Tamagotchies this was true but in the rarely used applications they are specced for there's little or no difference nowadays.
eslick to wobster
18 Sep 17#15
We have these in our kitchen and bathroom scales, pound shop ones don't last long, but kept using them, then saw Duracell versions on eBay, where the pound shop ones last a month the Duracell ones last 6 months or more with the same usage. Can't say how good these ones are but have to be better than the pound shop, home bargains, b&m ones.
Jestint to gazdoubleu
18 Sep 17#20
You surely aren't suggesting Panasonic batteries are 'quality'? :grin:
Jestint
18 Sep 17#5
Also sold in large Tesco's for £1
russellanam
18 Sep 17#8
No stock near my home or central London :disappointed:
dpathic2001
18 Sep 17#9
Ultimately, these break the kitchen units. Amongst other "for later" items, the mass accumulates under the cutlery tray in the cutlery drawer. this results in the occasional problem in opening and closing the drawer; the resulting shock weakening dowels and other fixings of the general kitchen unit structure.
Crossbow to dpathic2001
18 Sep 17#22
Can't you store them in a different/spare drawer where they're not massively accumulating & causing dowel-weakening & related problems?
Opening post
buy now, hoard them and try dig them out when you need them.
ABOUT THIS PRODUCT
All comments (23)