We have BlueCurve and 2 remotes (XR11, fw 1.1.3.8.).
When using fresh NiMH batteries, both will show depleted battery warnings within a few days, yet continue to function for weeks.
If the batteries are removed on the first warning, they recharge within 20 minutes. This indicates they are not depleted.
Is it possible that these remotes are sensing battery voltage, and give false warnings due to NiMH batteries being 1.2 v, whereas alkaline batteries are 1.5 volts when fresh?
Alkaline batteries act the same, I get low battery warnings, but will ignore it for a few weeks without any problem.
Hi: I've had new, fresh NiMH batteries in a Shaw BlueCurve remote for about 2 weeks now. I've ignored constant warnings about low battery.
Today, looking for something else, I went to BlueCurve Preferences and found that the remote thinks its batteries' level is zero. [See attached screen photo].
But the remote works just fine.
I continue to think that this remote creates false battery warnings.
I ignore the warnings as well. I use the old fashioned method, replace the batteries when it stops working.
An update: the same batteries from 2020-06-07 are still in the remote and work fine.
The low battery warnings have stopped.
Hi All: a final post.
These same batteries gave out yesterday, when the remote stopped working. It wouldn't process voice commands.
Despite more or less continuous warnings since their June installation, the batteries lasted until December 20, 2020.
Something is wrong with the remote's sensing of battery capacity.
Is Shaw looking at this issue? It’s suddenly happening all the time, many times an hour, and getting very annoying.
@Daffydill -- at the top of this discussion thread, I see:
2020-06-07 01:47 PM
When using fresh NiMH batteries, both will show depleted battery warnings within a few days, yet continue to function for weeks.
Is it possible that these remotes are sensing battery voltage, and give false warnings due to NiMH batteries being 1.2 v, whereas alkaline batteries are 1.5 volts when fresh?
So, are you using rechargeable NiMH (1.2 volts) batteries, or carbon-zinc (or alkaline) 1.5V batteries?
Do you have a multimeter, that can measure the wattage of each battery? Fresh (or freshly recharged) batteries should show over 5 Amperes.
I have been burning through Alkaline batteries with my new remote every 3 weeks. On my old remote they lasted a year. Can I have my old remote back. This is ridiculous and expensive. When the message says my remote batteries are low, it stops working. I can still run a clock for a month on the same battery.