Some people have warned me against buying SSDs and batteries from Chinese sellers, like from AliExpress. Because the seller could be lying about storage or cell capacity. But when it comes to a battery, if I have a multimeter, can't I verify the advertised capacity? If real capacity matches the advertised capacity, very good. If not, I can always return and complain to aliexpress.
My smartphone's original battery is just 3,220 mAh.
So my question: Don't I need just a multimeter to verify the advertised capacity? Wouldn't this remove any risk of buying batteries from unknown sellers? (As long as you buy from a website that has buyer protection for dishonest selling.)
Tue May 16 21:28:29 PDT 2017 update: here's an example of what i was thinking of buying https://www.aliexpress.com/item/New...-Samsung-Galaxy-Note-4-N9100/32718870300.html
My smartphone's original battery is just 3,220 mAh.
So my question: Don't I need just a multimeter to verify the advertised capacity? Wouldn't this remove any risk of buying batteries from unknown sellers? (As long as you buy from a website that has buyer protection for dishonest selling.)
Tue May 16 21:28:29 PDT 2017 update: here's an example of what i was thinking of buying https://www.aliexpress.com/item/New...-Samsung-Galaxy-Note-4-N9100/32718870300.html
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