well, if you mean "Vulcan", if you turn the weapon upsidedown, look abit further from the trigger, you will see a little screw isolated to the others as the others are screwed into the sides, not the direct bottom. Unscrew it, pull out the chamber, and the batteries are there.
The amount of money you can save by reusing batteries will depend on how often you use batteries and how many you typically go through. However, reusing batteries can help cut down on the cost of continually purchasing new ones, potentially saving you a significant amount of money over time.
Yes, you can typically replace NiCd batteries with NiMH batteries in solar lights as long as the voltage and size of the batteries are compatible. NiMH batteries are a more environmentally friendly option and may provide better performance in some cases.
The answer is governed by the size of the flashlight. Count the amount of batteries that go into the flashlight and then multiply by 1.5 and this will give you the voltage of the flashlight. For NiCd and NiMH rechargeable batteries multiply by 1.3 volts.
D batteries are larger than AA batteries, which means they contain more energy and a larger capacity to deliver power over a longer period of time. This results in D batteries being considered stronger than AA batteries, even though they have the same voltage.
DC definitely, all car batteries - all batteries.
No, the Nerf Barricade requires 3 AA Batteries in order to function at all.
the guns don't use batteries.
Nerf Stampede:6 D batteries Nerf Vulcan:6 D batteries Nerf Barricade:3 AA batteries
The batteries make the gun go full auto.
no electronic Nerf guns come with batteries ...sorry :-(
It uttery and completely depends on which gun you're talking about.
it doesn't, you have to have batteries
where do batteries go in a Nerf havok fire ebf 25 toy gun
Valcon Games was created in 2005.
Recon's don't take batteries, buddy.
no its not real!
no