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fox ([personal profile] fox) wrote2003-08-17 10:34 pm
Entry tags:

question:

ordinary batteries come in AAA, AA, C, and D, right? so the question is this: how can there be AAA and AA, without A, and how come there's no B?
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[personal profile] thalia 2003-08-17 07:41 pm (UTC)(link)
Believe it or not, Cecil Adams answered this question, although it's not very entertaining.

Dear Cecil:

In a world of A, AA, AAA, C, and D, are there any B-sized batteries? --Paul Guss and Bill Rauchholz, Arlington, Virginia


Cecil replies:

A batteries? In what alternative universe did you guys find A batteries? Virtually no one makes them today, or B batteries either. The letters are part of a standard for single-cell batteries devised by the American National Standards Institute, or ANSI, beginning in the 1920s. (I realize that, strictly speaking, a battery consists of two or more cells, but let's not get picky.) Today the standard sizes range from AAAA to G, and for some reason there's also J, N, and 6. AAA, AA, C, and D were the only sizes that caught on in a big way commercially, but the others haven't totally disappeared. If you pry apart one of those big 6-volt lantern batteries, you'll find four F cells inside.

--CECIL ADAMS