Most people's idea of the inside of a galvanic cell is based on schematic drawings and experiments as we remember them from chemistry classes. So, two rods immersed in electrolyte. The electrode of a real nickel-cadmium cell would therefore be hardly identifiable by the vast majority of the public, as it rather resembles a very fine metal sieve.
The electrode of the Ni-Cd cell is based on two several centimeters wide strips of deep-drawn ferritic low-carbon steel, the center of which is perforated to ensure contact between the active material in the electrode and the electrolyte itself. One of these strips is formed into the shape of a tray into which the active material is subsequently charged in the gear of the filling line. The second strip closes it from above so that a typically 8-12 meter long rod or lamella filled with active material comes out of the press.