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Morgans wrote:
"Anthony W" wrote Interesting stuff. A few years back I bought a cheap harbor freight 12v cordless drill with an extra battery pack. Surprisingly the drill was pretty good quality for the money but the battery packs were shot in a week. Now the drill is still sitting around here somewhere and pretty much useless. I was thinking about adding a long cord and a cigarette lighter adapter so the thing could be used out and about rather than tossing it. I'm considering fixing it now. Two things to consider, here. Cheap batteries, like you said. Probably very small capacity, too. Replace them with the largest capacity batteries that will fit, if you go that route. Next, is that the charger is a cheap, no brain charger, and will happily over charge your batteries, and charge your new battery to death. If you don't have a smart, peak detecting charger from another drill or power tool that you can rig a couple wires with alligator clips to, or slide terminals (whatever will work the best with your cheap drill pack) you should figure out what else you could do about charging. If you have enough stuff you want to charge properly, you could get a remote control car or airplane battery charger (a field charger that runs off of 12 volts is probably your cheapest good option) and charge all of your assorted stuff with that. You know you are getting full charges, and not over charges. You would have to make the call on whether it is worth spending a fair amount of money on something like that. Another fairly inexpensive option is to use the charger that came with it, but add some "options" to it. With the drill pack drained, put a volt meter in line, and check how many milliamps the charger is putting out. As it is about half charged, and then 90% charged, read the milliamps again. That will give you some idea of how much the charger is putting out on average. Get yourself a 12 hour wind up timer switch, and make up a timed outlet to plug your cheap charger into. You should then be able to make an educated guess at how long it needs to charge, depending on how much you drained the battery. You will need to put about 10% extra charge (when charging a full charge time; pro-rate shorter times accordingly) into the battery, based on straight capacity and charger output. Note that this type of thing is not the best way to do things, but better than killing new batteries with over charges. If you have a smart charger around, adapt it to charge all of your stuff with dumb chargers. Hope that is food for though. I need to rig up a new pack and alternate charge method for a cheap drill, myself. It was so cheap I couldn't pass it up! g Cerainly food for thought, Morg. Thanks a lot. Richard |
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