🔊 Hear the Difference with Every Charge!
These Size 312 Hearing Aid Batteries come in a pack of 80, designed for high-use devices with a remarkable 4-year shelf life. Each battery is mercury-free and packaged securely for easy access, ensuring you never miss a moment of sound. Proudly made in the USA, these batteries are the perfect companion for your hearing aids.
Item Dimensions | 2 x 0.3 x 1.67 inches |
Item Weight | 0.21 Pounds |
Unit Count | 80.0 Count |
Battery Cell Type | Zinc |
Recommended Uses For Product | Hearing Aid |
Reusability | Single Use |
Voltage | 1.45 Volts |
P**N
Last 1.3 times longer - but cost 2.2 times as much
Since joining Costco I have always used their Kirkland hearing aid batteries and have been happy with the convenience and the life of the batteries. But since encountering the new, government mandated child-proof (and senior-resistant) packaging of Kirkland batteries, I started shopping around and found I was able to buy genuine RayOVac batteries online from Wholesalehome that were still supplied in the old, user-friendly packaging. I bought a package of 60 in September, 2024 that were listed on Amazon as RayOVac Extra, and that is what arrived, in people-friendly 6-packs. I ordered 120 more in January, 2025, also from Wholesalehome, and on arrival these were also RayOVac Extras, now in 8-packs that were also people friendly. Perhaps importantly, in both cases the packaging says "Made in the UK".Today, February 8, I note that batteries are still available from Wholesalehome, and while the poor quality picture of the product on Amazon looks like it could be RayOVac packaging, the name RayOVac does not actually appear on the pictured product, nor anywhere in the product information, and the batteries are now listed as "Wholesalehome" batteries.I note that the hearing aid battery market seems to be rather fluid at the moment. The product page of the batteries I bought both in September and January from Wholesalehome showed RayOVac packaging that did not say "Child-proof", and while some very recent reviews on the Wholesalehome product page do specifically mention "ease of removal", others, posted just as recently, complain of the difficult, child-proof packaging. So, based on these recent mixed reviews, it seems not clear which packaging version you will receive if you order now, and there is no help from the product page either, since it doesn't even show a picture of the full product. In contrast, the RayOVac storefront on Amazon clearly shows the battery packaging being labelled "child-proof", so presumably this is what you will get if you order your RayOVac batteries directly from their Amazon storefront. It's all very confusing.Like many, I bristled at this childproof packaging when I first encountered it, and the result of my first frustrating efforts to pull out two new batteries was a little pile of batteries and small shreds of cardboard and plastic (first picture). Viewing the manufacturer's advice on how to open this new packaging does make the process easier, but it still makes a mess and requires some wrist strength and dealing with a sharp scissors, and I just wonder how a senior citizen with arthritis, for example, would fare with this packaging. On the surface, the packaging is ludicrous, really. Mandated to introduce a child proof package, they simply retained the overall "lazy susan with porthole" design, but in the child-proof version the lazy susan doesn't turn, and there is no porthole. It's like designing a robot starting with the human form (here's looking at you, Robbie) versus starting with a requirement to optimize function and performance. This seems to currently be the industry-wide solution to providing a child-proof dispenser. I have to assume that no one anticipated this requirement for child-proof packaging, and so the quick-fix was to modify the already existing packaging equipment. Otherwise, the design makes no sense.We can only hope that somewhere in the business world, clever minds are at work at this problem and a year from now a truly child-resistant, but also senior-friendly, packaging will emerge. In the meantime, I hope the 180 batteries in user friendly packs that I just purchased will last me. Otherwise, when they are all gone, if the current child-proof packaging is still the state-of-the-art, I will have to do what I did when I first encountered it: cut up the 8-pack in one go and put all the batteries in a handy, senior-friendly jar (second picture). (And of course keep that jar away from any children.)In the meantime, if senior-friendly packaging of RayOVac batteries can still be confidently ordered, it is fair to ask how much of a premium one is paying for this feature, all other things being equal. I paid significantly more per battery for these bulk RayOVac batteries from Wholesalehome compared with the Kirkland batteries purchased at the Costco warehouse (37 cents per battery, RayOVac, versus 17 cents per battery for Kirkland). The real question, however, is how much one is actually paying per hour of battery life. To address this, I conducted a real world study, and found that in fact the RayOVacs do last significantly longer than the Kirklands. But not enough to formally make up for the higher price. So if you are focused on minimizing the cost per hour of battery life (and you are a Costco member), you might favor the Kirkland ones.Details: In my study, I removed the tabs and let the battery sit for a minute or so, as suggested, before inserting them in the hearing aid. I did not disconnect my hearing aids from the Bluetooth connection to my mobile phone, but I did rigorously avoid using the bluetooth connection over the course of the study: no listening to music through my hearing aids, no phone calls mediated by my hearing aids, etc. I timed each day's use and marked the end of useful life as the time at which I got the first "dying battery" indicator tone. Here are the results: the RayOVac batteries lasted about 80 hours, while the Kirkland batteries lasted about 60 hours. More specifically, over a total of 5 tests, the Kirklands had a mean life of 61.1 hours, plus or minus 3.6 hours. Over 4 tests, the RayOVacs had a mean life of 79.9 hours, plus or minus 1.0 hours. Note the significant difference in standard deviation - clearly the RayOVac manufacturing process, and/or quality control, is far superior to that associated with the Kirkland batteries.I should mention that the Kirkland batteries do have one feature that is more user-friendly than RayOVac, and that is the length of the tab. The tab on the RayOVac is so short that it is a challenge to grip it to pull it off the battery. The Kirkland tab - on both the original as well as the new, child-proof version - is longer and much easier to manage. Meanwhile, the child-proof packaging shown for RayOVac batteries, on the RayOVac storefront on Amazon, still shows the same, short tabs.So, in conclusion, in a new world where all battery retailers in the US provide only the same incredibly inconvenient child-resistant packaging, the Kirklands will end up being somewhat more convenient than RayOVacs - because of the tab lengths - and can also be counted on to provide more battery life per dollar, albeit with more variable lifetimes.
N**N
Easy to open package!
I am so grateful that I found this battery company! FINALLY a company that is putting the batteries in a package that Houdini doesn’t need to open! The window at the back of the package opens and you can take an individual battery out and then turn the dial for the next one. I realize that there was a reason for childproof packaging, BUT, those other ones were impossible to open even with industrial strength scissors! Keep making this package the same way…PLEASE! As a Senior citizen, I need the package to be easy to open.!!!
E**
Batteries for hearing aid
Batteries were good, just the right size.
S**N
Bus less at a time
I love how they last to over a week. But am glad I waited to now because the ones I have left only last a week to the day. I guess they loose their potency over time. I think the thing to do is not buy so many at one time. About half the quantity would be about perfect as to lasting longer than one week.
P**M
Child resistant packaging is a nightmare for the elderly consumer! Will never buy again.
The item sent to me was child resistant packaging i the description said: "120 size 132 hearing aid batteries are included to help you provide consistent power to your hearing device. Your hearing is important; never run out of battery with this multi-pack. size 312 batteries are formulated to provide quality performance over the life of the battery and deliver more power. It is ideal for high-use devices and features like streaming video, audio, and phone calls. Be equipped! Take along the caddy, which holds 2 batteries to ensure constant power to your hearing aids. Convenient packaging features a reclosable back door and a dial to turn and remove one battery at a time. The batteries won't leak, swell, or damage devices. Hearing aid batteries 312 have a 4-year shelf life and will hold power for up to 4 years in storage. The cells in each mercury-free size 312 battery, with a balanced formula, provide consistent, high-quality performance for your hearing aid devices. Use these batteries to power your listening devices and hearing aids for hearing assistance you can depend on! Purchase yours today! You have nothing to lose and so much to gain!"
K**R
changed to childproof
Are you kidding me - Childproof!!! Senior citizen proof!! what is the primary age group using hearing aids?? not children unless supervised by an adult. It took me aproximately 20 minutes to figure out and to get a battery out of the heavy duty plastic case which is now mutilated, my scissors could not cut that plastic and ended up as a pryer to separate only one battery - what about the rest!!!!????
J**S
They do the job and are long lasting
Why did you pick this product vs others?:The batteries are a good value for the money. However, getting them out of the plastic container is not easily done, even with scissors.
J**E
Batteries work\ packaging not so much !
Safety is important But if you can’t get them out - they don’t do you much good.Hate the packaging - the batteries work about as well as any.
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