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Yes. Only if it has the rechargeable brand. There are YouTube videos on why you can, but shouldn't charge your regular batteries with the charging station.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.These are usually used in solar lighting systems. As such they are expected to be recharged in the light fixture they come in. I was unable to locate any stand-alone chargers for 2/3 AA batteries. Now you know: don't buy equipment with odd-sized batteries. I learned my lesson after Kodak refused to stock batteries for my $500 Kodak digital SLR camera. It's a pretty paperweight (but it's an even better camera if one could only find that weird-shaped battery it uses).
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Do NOT attempt to charge Lithium batteries of any kind with this charger. This is a charger for NiMH batteries ONLY. Any attempt to charge any Lithium battery in this charger could result in overheating and a fire. Regardless of whatever you may have seen on the Internet, do NOT try it. In particular, the battery in the question, the Energizer L91 ( https://data.energizer.com/pdfs/l91.pdf ) is NOT a rechargeable battery anyhow. The reader has been warned. FYI: To date, the name brand companies have not released rechargeable Lithium batteries in the consumer sizes (AAA, AA, etc.). There are some low-capacity hybrids on Amazon that are charged via a built-in USB charger but they are kludgy at best. Any component failure on their tiny little cheap-from-china printed circuit board / charging circuit design could cause overheating and a fire. Is your computer / home really worth the risk?
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