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INDUSTRY
SOLUTIONS
• Construction
• Education
• Healthcare
• Hospitality
• Manufacturing
• Property Management
• Retail
• Transportation
• Fire & Rescue
• Law Enforcement |
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Motorola Batteries - Proven Tough |
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See Battery Care &
Tips |
Download White
Paper
Motorola Batteries are Proven Tough |
Superior Performance
Only Motorola Original Products are performance
matched to ensure the same high standards of
quality that you enjoy with your Motorola
two-way radio. When you see the Motorola
Original logo, you know the products are built
and tested to meet the toughest standards. Tough
Motorola Original Products protect your
communication system from the hazards of
everyday life - you can count on it.
Motorola engineers each battery to provide
optimum performance with specific Motorola
radios and accessories. And Motorola stands
behind its batteries with industry-leading
warranties. So you get clear, reliable
communication under tough conditions - something
you can't be sure of with a competitor's
battery.
Motorola's batteries and radios also conform to
the "intrinsically safe" standard: certified and
rated by an approval agency as intrinsically
safe for use in classified hazardous areas.
Built Tough
All batteries are not alike. Motorola two-way
wireless radio batteries employ the highest
standards of quality and consistency, from the
manufacturing floor to the rugged requirements
of real-world use.
Motorola starts with premium grade battery cells
from reliable suppliers. These premium battery
cells provide high capacity, long cycle life,
low impedance, a wide operating temperature
range (-30C° to +50°C) and the best shock
resistance available. They are tough enough to
survive sudden impacts without increasing
impedance, and they are also more uniform, which
means you can count on the same high energy,
high number of charge cycles and durability with
every Motorola battery you buy.
A common source of battery failure lies in the
connecting circuitry between battery components:
Motorola uses soft film copper flex circuitry
which has the ability to "give" in the case of
an impact - unlike the thin wires found in other
battery brands. This circuitry also enables the
most efficient flow of electrical current,
reducing impedance and improving performance.
And Motorola solders, rather than welds, battery
components to the flex circuits, which reduces
aging and impedance build-up.
Battery shock absorbers and filler hold all
battery components in place. Motorola uses a
variety of pliable shock absorbing materials to
protect the cell back and flex circuitry. By
damping vibration inside the battery housing,
these materials reduce component damage during
sudden impact. (Many competitors cut costs by
not including shock absorbers, making their
batteries more susceptible to breaking from a
drop or impact.)
For battery casings, Motorola only uses tough
polycarbonate plastic, which provides maximum
protection against battery failures from falls
or sudden impacts. Polycarbonate has
significantly more tensile strength (the ability
to resist lateral forces) and flexural strength
(the ability to withstand flexing or bending)
than ABS plastic.
Motorola's ISO 9000 manufacturing environment,
powered by state-of-the-art, computer-controlled
equipment, ensures automated, monitored and
consistent assembly for every battery produced.
(Often, competitive batteries are assembled by
hand, leading to lower quality construction.)
And Motorola batteries are performance-matched
to the corresponding Motorola two-way wireless
radio, optimizing all parts of the
communications system: radios, batteries,
antennas and reception/transmission circuits.
Tested Tough
As part of Motorola's manufacturing process,
each two-way radio battery model must pass
grueling Accelerated Life Testing (ALT) that
includes a rain test (steady rainfall and wind
for 30 minutes on every surface), a salt fog
test (exposure to an atomized salt solution for
48 hours), a dust test (six hours of dust
blowing on all surfaces), a vibration test (up
to nine hours of exposure to vibration) and a
shock test (18 shocks with a minimum G force of
40 Gs apiece).
In addition to in-line process control during
manufacturing, Motorola routinely tests radios
and batteries as a system (within varying levels
of expended life cycles) to make sure they'll
operate within specifications every time you
need them.
The results were that Motorola batteries
dramatically outperformed competing batteries
from Battery Zone, Honeywell, Power Products and
Multiplier. |
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Sharp
Communication
3403 Governors Drive
Huntsville, AL 35805
(256) 533-2484 |
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