Appears to be a new, Nikon EN-EL15A battery. Fits my camera and works perfectly. I'm hopeful it will last a long time, like the original battery for my D7000. It took some time to arrive, but it was a backup battery, and I was expecting a long shipping time.
Verified purchase: Yes | Condition: New
I was a little skeptical considering this battery claimed to be official and yet cost less than half of what it did anywhere else I looked, but decided to make the jump regardless. When I received it I did a few tests. First off it weighs a couple grams less than my official batteries. The engravings seems to be shallower than the official batteries. The body of the battery also seems to be made of a different quality plastic than the official batteries as well. Battery life isn't quite as good as my others. I'd estimate I get 20% less battery life than the one that came with my D850.
Verified purchase: Yes | Condition: New
Well it's a battery and it fits my camera. I purchased as a spare and I'm glad I did and will in all likelihood purchase a second. It seems to hold a charge well. It arrived ahead of ETA and was packaged nicely. Not much to say about a battery.
Verified purchase: Yes | Condition: New
I'm such a nerd; I purchased a device that connects to my laptop and over the course of hours slowly drains 1 battery or 2 batteries while sampling every second to get an accurate a snapshot of a battery's "real" capacity. The numbers don't lie; Nikon brand batteries outperform all after-market batteries. Some brands, the better known ones, do come close, let's say on average 80%, but when I'm out shooting pics I'd rather spend a few extra dollars to get the maximum amount of time on my camera before having to switch. I assume, in a global supply chain, margins are low and there's a base cost to making batteries of a verifiably reliable capacity rating. Having said that, I think there is an opportunity for a vendor to build batteries to the same standard as OEM's but charge a little less, yet more than the traditional after-market brands. For example, if my choice is Nikon at $55 or good brand X at $25, but brand Y makes batteries equal in quality & capacity to Nikon's, then I would be okay with paying, say, $40-45. I would call that the frugal nerd target market :) Read full review
Verified purchase: Yes | Condition: New
If you're willing or able to wait 3-4 weeks to receive the battery, this is the way to go, as the savings is great, the product works perfectly, and my camera indicates this is a new battery. A win-win as far as I'm concerned
Verified purchase: Yes | Condition: New
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