Thanks for bringing up this safety topic Ozzie, they seem to be causing some house fires (and opened a pandora's box

) Everyone, from kids to elderly, has a lithium battery of some sort these days. It's made me want to hold off a bit longer on the larger applications for Li batteries. One good point from the story - install a smoke alarm near any Li recharging areas.
The ABC news story is interesting, especially what the fireys are saying!
Here is something from NSW fire dept
https://www.fire.nsw.gov.au/page.php?id=9389 (keep those smoke alarms serviced! humans can't smell smoke when asleep)
(Also don't use Lithium batteries under an ICE cars hood, ie. very hot environment)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=evghqj3SWPE (Report near end of video)
They don't like being overheated, overcharged, wrong charger.. etc Never leave them charging unsupervised eg overnight when asleep. Unplug when fully charged. Don't recharge close to flamable stuff like curtains. Once they are on fire, Lithium battery fires are very hard to extinguish with ordinary methods (best to disconnect power source). Finally proper disposal important, dont just chuck it in the wheelie bin (starts fires at the tip)
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-11-14/ ... /101647204
It seems like it's often user error when recharging them. Or the rare manufacturing defect leads to them "firing up".
For my Investigator battery i will be happy sticking with my tried and tested deep cycle Lead acid. (the extra ballast is also good)
