No, no 9 V batteries. I was contemplating another well reviewed charger that did do 9 V, as well as RAM and even up to D sized batteries. It even had USB ports on it with one being 2.4 A. I liked that! But the size was a little too big for my already tight travel suitcase. And even though it was a reliable smart charger, I didn't see any mention of the advanced analysis displays or reconditioning tools. Price was fair, but I took a pass.
The BC-700 is quite a few generations back from this 3400. I read about that one, and all the others right up to the 3400. Some of those did very well. The 1000 being highly regarded for quite a while. The 3100 and 3400 are more advanced, and mostly advancing towards Li Ion technologies. It just made more sense to try and stay ahead of the curve with newer offerings.
No problems with the buttons on mine...not yet, anyway. Believe me, if I notice a problem with anything, I'll post about it. A major improvement to me is being able to group all slots to the same commands. This is especially nice when you are charging in matched sets. And if I want to view just capacity, or another single measurement parameter, it stays on that parameter until I switch it to another measurement parameter. That I found better than waiting for the information to rotate through all the measurements, and I found it nicer to see one parameter for all batteries charging in a set to compare the cells with each other.
Although it's early, I'm also noticing the higher voltage on completed charge cycles, but even more importantly the cells in my (known) set are showing more consistency across all cells that I never had before. There always used to be a wide variation of values that concerned me. Not so on this 3400. And on my first run of a known set, I'm already getting much higher capacity measurements up in the 26 hundreds! All cells were over 2500, but one almost reached 2700. I never witnessed that on the other charger.
Maybe one of the biggest improvements of this Opus is the ability to accept older cells that may still be usable and resurrected from the dead by not being rejected for higher resistance. I will be testing that soon to see what it can do with those Powerex cells that wimped out in short order. The Powerex charger wouldn't touch those at all. With the other charger I was never able to recondition any of the batteries that crossed that 2.x resistance threshold. That alone could add up to some savings, and is what an advanced reconditioning charger should be all about. Why pay the extra price if it doesn't address those cells? I'll report back on that after some testing. I now wish I had a couple of these. I have too many batteries to test!
Phil