Video Camera & Battery Restrictions


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merliondude

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Now with the new flight ruling... I am a little concerned.

My video cameras are all high capacity battery. Like the largest sony M series and L series

How to go do overseas project without more batteries. All over 8 grams.

Will this effect all countries or only to and from USA?
 

Can you elaborate on the new flight's ruling? I'm curious and concern too.

Thanks
 

What my friends forwarded recently

Effective January 1, 2008, the following rules apply to the spare lithium batteries you carry with you in case the battery in a device runs low:
Spare batteries are the batteries you carry separately from the devices they power. When batteries are installed in a device, they are not considered spare batteries.
You may not pack a spare lithium battery in your checked baggage
You may bring spare lithium batteries with you in carry-on baggage – see our spare battery tips and how-to sections to find out how to pack spare batteries safely!
Even though we recommend carrying your devices with you in carry-on baggage as well, if you must bring one in checked baggage, you may check it with the batteries installed.
The following quantity limits apply to both your spare and installed batteries. The limits are expressed in grams of “equivalent lithium content.” 8 grams of equivalent lithium content is approximately 100 watt-hours. 25 grams is approximately 300 watt-hours:

Under the new rules, you can bring batteries with up to 8-gram equivalent lithium content. All lithium ion batteries in cell phones are below 8 gram equivalent lithium content. Nearly all laptop computers also are below this quantity threshold.

You can also bring up to two spare batteries with an aggregate equivalent lithium content of up to 25 grams, in addition to any batteries that fall below the 8-gram threshold. Examples of two types of lithium ion batteries with equivalent lithium content over 8 grams but below 25 are shown below.

For a lithium metal battery, whether installed in a device or carried as a spare, the limit on lithium content is 2 grams of lithium metal per battery.

Almost all consumer-type lithium metal batteries are below 2 grams of lithium metal. But if you are unsure, contact the manufacturer!
 

Anybody know how to calculate this Watt Hour thing???
 

Anybody know how to calculate this Watt Hour thing???

The battery should have an Ampere-Hour rating (or mA-Hour). Multiply this by the voltage and you will get Watt-Hour. But Watt_Hour is only a guide, the regulations are for the actual Lithium content, so if your Watt-Hour calculation is close to the limit you should check with the battery manufacturer regarding the Lithium content.
 

I think the easiest is to bring in your cam as hand-carry with 1 batt installed, and the rest all check in as luggage lah.

All the stupid regulations just make our life more difficult in air travel.
 

I think the easiest is to bring in your cam as hand-carry with 1 batt installed, and the rest all check in as luggage lah.

All the stupid regulations just make our life more difficult in air travel.

The point is that the new restrictions are for check-in luggage!
 

wat a bummer....missed reading that line....even for bloody checked in luggage?!?!
**** man...now what...we run our cameras on solar?

Perhaps we must make a batt pack that runs on AA cells already. :)
 

I'm guessing as long as we hand-carry the batt, should be still within the limit, I hope.

Anyone who just came back from US pls update.

Just side track a little, I was in US few months ago, and my diving torch was refused hand carry cos it uses 6 C-sized batt. The officer say the max is 3.... never heard of such rules before my travel so I have to re-check in the torch. Of cos I went out of the security check line, went to toilet, re queue again in the next line and another officer let me in without saying anything.... strange....
 

You only to ensure that the contacts are not exposed. It exclues those already loaded in the equipment. So tape it up with a gaffer or put it in a ziploc or if you still keep your original batts cover, use it.
 

And then someone invents a cheap device that can any type of lithium batteries can fit into.
So now every lithium battery is "plugged-in".


.
 

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