I see many folks commenting that they are using AA to C (or others) adapters to power their lights off smaller cells. What are the benefits/disadvantages of this?

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Thanks Herman. Taking this further, is there any "rule of thumb" for the difference in life (not cycles, but "burn time" power supply) between, for example, an AA and a C sized cells?
Like, is a C going to last 2.5x (just throwing numbers out there.....) longer than an AA (same chemical make-up)?
Just to do some nitpicking...You would need to look up the specific cell on the manufacturer's website. They're rated in ma/hour., so you can compare various manufacturers and cell sizes.
A 1200 ma/hour cell (any size) will have about twice the burn time of a 600ma/hour cell (any size).
I see many folks commenting that they are using AA to C (or others) adapters to power their lights off smaller cells. What are the benefits/disadvantages of this?![]()
I've just purchased a UK C4 ELED light and was looking into using rechargeable AAs as described in this thread. My only remaining question is if using AAs with spacers could have an undesireable effect on the bouyancy of the lamp. Will it be too positively bouyant with all that new air space in the housing (to the point being annoying to handle) or will it be negligible?