@rlemon the only thing that comes to my mind is for you to assemble your own battery, by joining smaller ones. That way you could charge them simultaneously. At least that's what one would do with RC batteries. I have a 16,000 Ah one downstairs that's built this way
This is also genius: javascript:(function(){var script=document.createElement('script');script.onload=function(){var stats=new Stats();document.body.appendChild(stats.dom);requestAnimationFrame(function loop(){stats.update();requestAnimationFrame(loop)});};script.src='//rawgit.com/mrdoob/stats.js/master/build/stats.min.js';document.head.appendChild(script);})()
yea. in the old non digital ones it was literally a battery on a spring. pushing on the button pushed in the spring pushing the battery directly into the contacts
like attaching a wire to each end with a coil in the middle.
the new ones just use a small chip to make sure you're not shorting out or stupid shit like that
That moment when you somehow stumble across a Stack Overflow post on the same Haskell problem you had but had no idea what was called so couldn't google it...