short 25r safe to use?

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Madadoor

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Feb 2, 2015
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Check what voltage it drained down to. If it only shorted for a second and it was a fully charged battery it should only be down to around 3.8ish. Wait for it to cool down completely in a safe place. if it went down to 3.2v or bellow, dispose of the battery safely. I would say that it most likely will be ok As long as it didn't discharge too much. I would mark the battery in some way so you know that it's the one you have shorted and would make a point to not put undue Stress on it. (Nothing over 15A)

In short (see what I did there) It should be ok, but the choice is YOURS
 

KGB7

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Nov 23, 2014
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Toss the battery and get a new one. From this point on, the battery is a bullet in a game of Russian Roulette. When i battery gets hot from shorting out, the chemical composition changes that makes up the battery, thus unforeseen side effects that fallow it, are unpredictable and are unsafe.

And when i said "toss", i mean you should properly recycle it.

New battery is $8, cheaper then a visit to ER or a call to your insurance.
 

Froth

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Mar 1, 2014
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Toss the battery and get a new one. From this point on, the battery is a bullet in a game of Russian Roulette. When i battery gets hot from shorting out, the chemical composition changes that makes up the battery, thus unforeseen side effects that fallow it, are unpredictable and are unsafe.

And when i said "toss", i mean you should properly recycle it.

New battery is $8, cheaper then a visit to ER or a call to your insurance.
Pretty much exactly what I came in here to post. The $8 battery is definitely not worth a risk of personal injury, recycle it.
 
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