No worries. For those interested, NiMHs work on an exothermic hydrogen-based charging and oxygen recombination process. When the charge rate goes over 85% of the charge capacity, the battery internal pressure increases significantly - As the charging process is exothermic, heat is the by-product. When the battery is overcharged the electrical input charge is converted to heat as it cannot charge the battery further. The pressure rises as greater amounts of gas are generated at the charge rate quicker than the battery can recombine. Without safety vents, batteries that are overcharged lead to physical failures.
There have been some stories out there about older type (non-LSD) NiMH rechargeables failing spectacularly, like these:
http://www.scmp.com/article/700123/rech ... des-camerahttp://www.scmp.com/article/689950/batt ... -mans-handBut no details on charger used in these though. One article mentions Camelion brand batteries. I've never experience this though, and generally use good quality chargers, and stay away from "fast" chargers and chargers that don't stop charging and rely on you to switch them off, or a timer.
And as I mentioned, better quality NiMH batteries like Eneloops have venting holes at the positive terminal to release pressure if such an event occurs.
But thankfully NiMH failures are significantly rarer and less dangerous than lithium based batteries.
Regarding the Eneloop datasheet's recommendation of 1C charging, I used to be a bit cynical. 1C will charge the batteries safely and relatively quickly, but probably at the detriment of the battery's life cycle. But if you are a battery manufacturer, you'd want people to keep coming back and buying your batteries, right? I mean, if my batteries are going into their 5th year and still working well, that means I'm not buying more batteries from you in that time. Some of my batches of Eneloops had estimates of 1500 recharge cycles, and I think some went up to 1800 cycles.
Before Panasonic bought the eneloop brand from Sanyo, I thought the older Eneloop datasheets were a little more detailed. The new Panasonic eneloop data sheets are like these
https://www.master-instruments.com.au/c ... le/63398/1You can see the charging current & time mentioned as 2000mA x 1.1hr for a 2000mAh battery. This equates to the 1C charge rate mentioned earlier.
So if you charge a 2000mAh Eneloop at 1C, you will have it charged in about 1 hour. My typical 0.3-0.5C charge rates are a more moderate rate and would charge the same 2000mAh Eneloop in around 2-3 hours. If you have a AAA Eneloop of 950mAh, note that you can go higher than 1C, and it will charge significantly faster, but will impact on the battery's life cycle, and should be done only on if you really need batteries quickly charged.