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JOHN TIPTON
Joined: 17 Sep 2006 Posts: 239 Location: Torquay - England
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Posted: Thu Aug 05, 2010 7:23 am Post subject: Battery charger |
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Hi Guys
The charger for my cordless drill (12v) has expired, can I connect my
automobile charger to the battery?
Best regards: John (RV9a-wings)
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longg(at)pjm.com Guest
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Posted: Thu Aug 05, 2010 7:48 am Post subject: Battery charger |
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John,
How many cold cranking amps does your cordless drill require? Spoil
yourself - take a trip to Harbor Freight
Glenn
--
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nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelect Guest
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Posted: Thu Aug 05, 2010 8:19 am Post subject: Battery charger |
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At 10:20 AM 8/5/2010, you wrote:
Quote: |
<jmtipton(at)btopenworld.com>
Hi Guys
The charger for my cordless drill (12v) has expired, can I connect
my automobile charger to the battery?
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Cordless products using Ni-Cad or NiMh batteries
use chargers as current sources as opposed to
voltage sources. While the wall-wart that comes
with it puts out some name-plate voltage, the current
fed to the cells during charging is generally limited
by some resistor in series. The trick is to know where
the resistor was installed. If inside the drill, then
yes, you can hook the drill to 12v car battery and
recharge the cells. If it's inside the expired wall-wart,
then direct connection to the drill will probably produce
some unhappy if not spectacular results.
You can put a milliammeter in series with an experimental
hookup to see. Put a 3A fuse in series with the whole
mess just to be safe. Hook it up and see how much charging
current flows into the drill . . . if under 200 mA or so,
you're good to go. Most drills have c-cells that like to
charge at 150 mA for 10-15 hours. If the current is too
high, add resistance in series to bring it down.
I have some tools where the wall-warts have died or gone
AWOL. I charge them from my electronics bench supplies set
to run in a 150 mA constant current mode.
But as suggested, unless you really delight in solving
such problems and want to take the $time$ to understand
and implement a solution, a trip to HF is the quick-n-
dirty solution. Let us know what you discover.
Bob . . .
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