I have been using these with my Mamiya 7ii: https://www.smallbattery.company.org.uk/sbc_2cr1-3n_sanyo.htmI would get on Ebay and find a US seller of fresh Japan made cells. I went through something similar with a Mamiya 6mf. Got some nice fresh silver oxide cells works fine. Some cameras allow you to hook a cable to the camera and keep the batteries in a holder under your coat. Battery performance drops dramatically with cold.
Yeah, not good idea in general to mix lithium and alkaline. There's a subtle difference in voltage. Get some nice fresh cells.Thanks all for the responses.
To questions about the batteries: One was an alkalike (28A), the other a lithium (28L) battery. Made by Duracell.
Very nice!I have been using these with my Mamiya 7ii: https://www.smallbattery.company.org.uk/sbc_2cr1-3n_sanyo.htm
Which battery was the old one?
The alkaline batteries have a lot less capacity, their voltage will change over time, and they are much more likely to be partially depleted right out of the package.
They are relatively cheap, so I keep them (for my 645 Pro) as emergency backups.
I don't quite follow. There is no mixing happening. The camera takes only one 6v battery at a time.Yeah, not good idea in general to mix lithium and alkaline. There's a subtle difference in voltage. Get some nice fresh cells.
Aha, I am mistaken. This takes a proper battery like my RZ67 II. I was thinking it was similar to my 6MF that uses 2 button cells. Never mind me.Lithium is the "old" one (a few months old). Alkaline, new.
I don't quite follow. There is no mixing happening. The camera takes only one 6v battery at a time.
I made a comment on your Reddit post, but let me repost here unless anyone else is looking for similar info:
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I'm not sure about the Mamiya 7, but I was inquiring with a camera tech about the Mamiya 6 for winter mountaineering. He said that the lenses are generally fine until about -10C, but that the film release mechanism (that allows you to shoot after advancing the film) can become unreliable when the lubricants inside start getting colder. Given your tests, it seems like the film release may the culprit, rather than the electronics. It seems this part may need looking at by a tech. I wasn't sure if the lubricants themselves were the problem, or if the stiff lubricants exacerbate an already problematic part.
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