Battery Storage Tip: Don’t Let 9-Volt Batteries Touch… Could Start A Fire!

by Lynnette

Batteries, Fires, Plastic Bags

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Do you keep extra household batteries in a junk drawer, or in a bag?

batteries-in-a-drawer

If so, you need to see this!…

9-volt batteries (like those used in your smoke detectors) can cause a fire and destroy your house — just like they destroyed this family’s house:

 

How Can 9v Batteries Cause A Fire?

Any time two 9-volt batteries touch (on the terminals on top of the batteries), they can create a charge, build enough heat, and burst into flames.

Yes, two 9v batteries touching can start a fire!

9-volt-batteries-start-fire

 

The Solution

There’s no need to stop using 9-volt batteries. They’re safe.

As long as two 9v batteries are not touching one another on the positive and negative terminal ends — or positioned close enough to one another to create a charge — they’re completely harmless.

To keep your home safe use these battery storage tips:

  • Ideally, you should keep batteries in their original packaging — because it was designed to keep the battery terminals from touching.
  • If you store batteries loosely in bags or outside of their original packaging, then put a strip of electrical tape over the battery terminals of each 9-volt battery that’s not currently in use. Or, you could put a rubberband around batteries of all one size, making sure that the positive and negative ends are all facing in the same direction.
  • If you want to be super organized with your battery storage, do something like this to keep all of the various battery sizes separated. Battery organizers have sections that make it easy to keep the battery terminals from touching one another.

Whatever you do, don’t leave loose 9-volt batteries lying around — either for future use or waiting to be recycled.

 

The Proof…

See how 9-volt batteries destroyed this family’s house:

 

Truth is, if any metal items inside your junk drawer happen to bump a 9-volt battery stored inside that drawer, then a fire could happen. Here’s more proof:

 

Don’t believe there’s enough charge in a 9-volt battery to create heat, and ultimately a fire? I remember, as a child, licking 9v batteries as part of a science experiment. There is, indeed, a sensation! As seen here:

In fact, it’s a well-known fact that 9-volt batteries are recommended as fire-starters when you’re camping, or in a survival situation. A quick search on YouTube will reveal many of the ways that 9v batteries are used in combination with anything metal to start fires.

 

The Takeaways

  • Don’t keep 9-volt batteries outside of their original packaging.
  • Especially don’t store 9v batteries loosely in drawers or in bags.
  • If you do store 9-volt batteries loosely, then place a piece of electrical tape over the battery terminals first. Or, secure batteries in a rubberband first. Or, keep your batteries neatly separated in a battery organizer.

As for battery storage in general…

Make sure all the positives point the same way. If the terminals touch each other, the life of the batteries can be shortened. And be sure to put them in a plastic bag so they don’t touch metal objects, like keys, which can cause electrical shorting. Source

fire-trucks

 

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