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Could possibly be a 14500 form factor 3.7V battery but that takes effort to get and still isn't that many times over AA voltage. Most likely a short somewhere so not even her fault.
Also environmently unsafe to throw away a rechargeable battery.. A responsible person would take it to recycling place or a store like batteries plus that could maybe solve the problem of melting remote?
>This happened a month ago I swear to god I thought she was like nine years old when this happened until she mentioned that. The title of this video was NOT clickbait, this is an actual new level of Girlfailure, she's a pioneer.
There must have been a short somehow. Either that or she somehow got one of those specialty higher voltage batteries that have a similar form factor to AAs. I can't imagine just putting a battery in backwards causing it to discharge and heat up like that.
She still manages to surprise me. Even after her KNOWLEDGE(tm) about dinosaurs, The Big Bang, evolution, gorillas... And who the heck throws hazardous waste ln the trash. Or throws a malfunctioning device into a pile of combustible material.
yea and when the chater said that he would have said that "this happen 20 years ago" and she said that she wasn't even alive that long ago LIKE SISTER LIE ABOUT YOUR AGE THEN LOL
That's my guess unique specialty AA batteries. That, or the battery had a short and all it needed to cause the thermal runaway was for it to be connected to a circuit of some kind.
@@GANTZ100pts oh. we learn something new everyday. I thought thermal runaway for batteries only happens when there's a puncture. did something different happen in this case?
@@GANTZ100pts She probably stuck the cell in backwards and it shorted thru either the remote electronics or a shunt reverse polarity protection diode. I doubt that she would have 3.6V lithium thionyl chloride AA cells lying around cuz expensive.
Putting the batteries in the wrong way won't make it short circuit and build up heat. It just won't complete the circuit. There could have been a short in one of, or both, batteries, she could have put the wrong voltage battery in by mistake, or one of the batteries could have been punctured. She's not a girlfailure for this happening to her remote, she's a girlfailure for trying to set it on "cool" things to "cool off", googling what's happening as her remote is melting, and ultimately, just throwing the melting, thermally active remote w/batteries in her trash, which is likely full of combustible material.
@@ChrisWilliams-lf8ex no I'm not talking about the circuit failure, I'm talking how did she not understand the -ve an +ve part Yea the cool off part also pretty wild ngl
If a batterie overheats Take it out and put it somewhere to cool down. Somewhere out of harms way and won't catch fire to anything In some cases, chuck it in a tub of water. Airliners used to have a huge tub of water on the aircraft itself. It was there so that if anyone had phone overheating, due to the batterie, they would chuck it in there in there for it to cool down, so the plane doesn't potentially catch fire 😅 When it comes to lithium batteries, there is unfortunatly no easy way to put that out. Once a cell goes, that's it. It's why you sometimes see electric cars randomly combust I know this is long, but when i learnt all this for work, I was like, " There's no f****** way! "
Also there’s a reason why there’s so many hazmat regulations concering transporting lithium ion batteries bybair or sea. They have a pesky havit of catching fire, and for planes and ships, that tends to be bad
Probs something off in the remote, Some energy regulator must have failed and caused a continuous loop The flowing current caused the heat But still there had to be something wrong with the battery charge
@@thefinalday5858 Even if you short the remote, unless you short it right there on the connectors (at which point its more likely she broke the batteries causing the ZO or KOH to leak) it would still take quite a long time to build up to the 150-180 degrees required to melt most types of plastics used for remotes.
If it was a higher voltage battery, like a 3v or 4.7v lithium battery used in vapes and other things, it could happen. Some of those have a VERY similar size and shape to a standard 1.5v AA battery.
Putting one in backwards only cancels out the flow of electricity. This can be useful if you have something like an emergency flashlight, as it helps to reduce the drain over long periods of storage. Learned about this technique years ago, and haven't had any devices I've tried it with melt. Just flip it back the right way, and works just fine.
i dont understand this. if they were in series then there couldn't be a short circuit. it would just be the equivalent of a battery with very small voltage and double the internal resistance. if they were in parallel then it would've short circuited. is there some kind of ideal assumption im making that breaks down in the real world?
Ok for this, I can't call her a girl failure for it. It wasn't 'cause she put the battaries backwards, putting them backwards makes it so that there is no electric charge flowing so it wasn't that. The batteries were just faulty, her only mistake in this was her throwing the batteries in the trash rather than putting them in a plastic back with ice so that they cool down. Other than that I got to be fair if something like this has never happened to you before you wouldn't know what to do in general. I know 'cause this happened to my grandma with one of her old radios when I was a kid at her house and the moment she saw it she put on thick plastic gloves and put the batteries in ice.
I mean if your batteries start getting real hot you should remove them from the remote not put the remote on a table/tile in hopes they would cool off in the remote. but yeah otherwise not much of a girl failure.