| > Behold <a single counterexample that is far less commonly encountered by consumers than phones, tablets, laptops, or external power banks> People still use AAA batteries, and that probably the most well-known, premium brand of rechargeable AAAs. > Consumers care about the amp-hour capacity of larger devices for various reasons. They need to figure out how many times they can recharge a phone from an external power bank. They want to understand how much less efficient their laptop is than their tablet. But they do care about the metric prefix? mAh far more established and slightly more convenient to use than Ah for these kinds of batteries. Edit: > You have also ignored that we can express 0.8Ah. It doesn't have to be 800mAh vs 2Ah. Since things less than 1Ah are far less common for consumers, it would be logical to just show everything in Ah, and then represent those smaller things as fractional Ah, if we're afraid of multiplying and dividing by 1000. I haven't ignored that, it's just not a very appealing thing to do and doesn't answer any of the problems with switching the customary prefix. Yes. It would be possible to relabel all consumer batteries with Ah instead of mAh, but why would anyone want to go through all that trouble? |
Consumers do not know the amp-hour capacity of coin cells or AAA batteries. They don't know and they don't care. Consumers put a coin cell into an AirTag and come back a year later to replace it when their iPhone tells them to. They don't care about the capacity. It's not relevant to this discussion at all. The percentage of consumers who care about the capacity of those types of batteries is certainly tiny.
> But they do care about the metric prefix? mAh far more established and slightly more convenient to use than Ah for these kinds of batteries.
It is not more convenient, since consumers do not think about <1Ah values, virtually ever.
> Yes. It would be possible to relabel all consumer batteries with Ah instead of mAh, but why would anyone want to go through all that trouble?
And I repeat: We could represent all distances in millimeters just in case, but we don't.
LA is only 4,506,163,000 millimeters from NYC. Very convenient.