Most other battery "Sudo-manufacturers" like Efest, MXJO, AWT, Eizfan, Beizen, etc buy up the B and C bin discards the big 4 won't put their name on and sell as authentics, re-wrap with the Sudo label with the PDR amp rating. The big 4 main battery manufacturers (LG, Sony, Samsung, Panasonic/Sanyo) on their authentic A Bin batteries they sell never list an Amp rating on their casing or insulator wrapping, just model number, a serial or batch number, and the nominal voltage rating 3.7v with the Mah rating. Just make sure to buy from a reputable source, as there are a lot of counterfeits out there.ฤก) 35amps <- This is a dangerous rating, it is not the Continuous Discharge Rating being listed, but the Pulse Discharge rating, the difference between CDR and PDR is CDR is what the battery can sustain the whole discharge from fresh 4.2v charge down to 3.0v, PDR there is no set variables of what is a considered a max pulse time, it could be anywhere between 1/2 a second to 2 seconds, after that the battery has to shift down to CDR or overheat and potentially vent. If you want a bit more capacity the LG HG2s are perfectly good batteries that claim to be 3000 mAh (a bit less in my experience, but close enough.) Samsung and Sony also make good batteries in this range. With your usage you're actually more likely to have battery issues on the charger than while you're using your batteries in a decent regulated mod, I think. I'd also steer clear of batteries that claim a lot more than they deliver- that's a bad sign. honestly you can't be going through batteries that quickly, so I'd think that you'd do best to stick with good vaping batteries, which tend to top out at a claimed 3000 mAh. At 7.9 Watts (which is an oddly specific number- don't you change that at least a bit for different juice, etc?) you're not likely to stress a good battery much, and you could likely get away with a lesser battery (with maybe more mAh,) especially in a regulated mod, but. The thing you want to be a bit careful about (aside from buying good batteries) is the amperage you're pulling from the battery.
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