How to revive or recondition cordless power tool batteries

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Pod
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How to revive or recondition cordless power tool batteries

Post by Pod »

Thought I'd share my experiences with power tool batteries. No doubt I'm not the only one who has gone to use one of these tools, only to find that due to lack of use (or charging :wink: ), the battery is flat?

Often, the charger will not want to charge a fully discharged battery. This can be remedied by connecting up the flat battery to a 12volt car battery charger for a few minutes. Once the battery has taken a little charge, it is often possible to switch it to its normal charger, which will work as usual. Please note that I take no responsibility for the cordless battery exploding etc, so don't leave it on charge for too long!

If this fix fails, it is possible to dismantle the battery pack. Inside, you will find a number of cells (in my experience, "sub-C" size, rated at 1.2v) which are connected in series, the number depending upon the voltage of the battery pack. For example, a 15.6v battery will contain 13 cells.

These are available on ebay. I bought the 13 I needed from China for about £16 including postage. Not only was this much cheaper than buying a new battery pack (if available!), but saved me from having to throw away a perfectly serviceable and expensive power tool.
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Re: How to revive or recondition cordless power tool batteries

Post by conez0 »

Not the sort of thing I'd expect to see on BigCoupe, but this is great. I've done this for cordless tools and my Roomba.

For those that dont know what is going on when the battery drops below a certain charge level the internal impedance goes up so high that the charger no longer "detects" the battery.

I hook mine up to a variable bench power supply and dial in 110% of the battery voltage (e.g. 13.2v for a 12v battery). My power supply you can set a current limit so I'll set to 0.5A and charge for twice the number of Amp-hours. So for a 2400 mAh batter I'd charge it for 4h 45m.
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Re: How to revive or recondition cordless power tool batteries

Post by olympia57 »

Good thread .
I had a Polish guy working with me recently and he had a full array of power tools that he had modified to run on Lithium Polymer (LIPO) batteries .
He is heavily into building and flying model helecopters and drones and used the batteries that he was familiar with on the power tools . Their battery performance was impressive .
His English is reasonable but technical translation was difficult and when he mentioned that there was a possibility of explosion or combustion if the correct charger and charging method was not employed , I rapidly lost interest ...... :shock:
We have to complete another job within the next month so I'll take some time to accurately ask what is involved and the costs therin.
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Re: How to revive or recondition cordless power tool batteries

Post by Pod »

conez0 wrote:Not the sort of thing I'd expect to see on BigCoupe
But this is the "workshop" section! Does everybody else either use air-powered or corded tools on their cars :-k
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Re: How to revive or recondition cordless power tool batteries

Post by sansouci »

I've used Primecell to rebuild my 12v dewalt power packs. They are on the web with applications and pricing.
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Re: How to revive or recondition cordless power tool batteries

Post by hornhospital »

Air tools, mostly. When you have one of these, it's a given that air tools will be part of the arsenal.
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Re: How to revive or recondition cordless power tool batteries

Post by sansouci »

hornhospital wrote:Air tools, mostly. When you have one of these, it's a given that air tools will be part of the arsenal.
Ken,
Is that sitting inside your garage? If so, how do you deal with the noise? I've seen some neat enclosures in garage.journal.
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Re: How to revive or recondition cordless power tool batteries

Post by hornhospital »

It's under a lean-to behind the shop. It's actually pretty quiet...especially considering it was built the same year I was, 1951. WABCO (Westinghouse Air Brake, now Wabtec) makes some incredibly durable stuff. It's held up a lot better than I have.

It's a model 3YC with a 125 gallon receiver. 25 CFM @ 90 psi. I run it at 90 cut in and 135 cut out. I had to have something that big for testing locomotive air horns. I also have three media blasting cabinets that take a lot of cfm. One really big one with aluminum oxide media, and two smaller ones (the ones that Harbor Freight sells) with plastic beads in one and glass beads in the other.
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Re: How to revive or recondition cordless power tool batteries

Post by GRNSHRK »

OK, pretty sure I have this problem with my Craftsmen drill/driver, 19.2V version :roll:

So looking at the battery pack, there are 4 "conductors" on the end that fits into the charger :-k

Just exactly where does one connect the battery charger terminals :-k

Photos would be great, I can snap a shot of my battery pack as well, if that would help [-o<
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Re: How to revive or recondition cordless power tool batteries

Post by Pod »

GRNSHRK wrote:OK, pretty sure I have this problem with my Craftsmen drill/driver, 19.2V version :roll:

So looking at the battery pack, there are 4 "conductors" on the end that fits into the charger :-k

Just exactly where does one connect the battery charger terminals :-k

Photos would be great, I can snap a shot of my battery pack as well, if that would help [-o<
My battery pack was the same. Two of the connections went to something which looked like a capacitor(?) which may be to reduce rf interference(?).

The easiest thing for you to do is split the casing and all will be clear. Mine had tamper proof triangular-head fixings, but they came out easily enough. HTH :wink:
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Re: How to revive or recondition cordless power tool batteries

Post by Brucey »

re connector identification; look inside the tool, and you will usually see that only two of the three or four pins connect to the tool itself. These are the power connections.

If you have a voltmeter, set it to some low DC voltage and probe the connections. Even a really knackered battery will show some voltage on the relevant pins.

FWIW, the extra connections to the battery are usually a sensor of some kind, eg a temperature sensor (for NiCd or NiMH) . This reports back to the charger and it ought to prevent the battery from being overcharged; several different cell types are both damaged by being overcharged and/or being to heat up when they are being overcharged. If you rebuild a battery pack this sensor should be reinstated in exactly the way it was originally. To be sure, it is best to measure it/test it to make sure it is still OK.

Obviously if you rebuild a battery pack with different cells (either by type or capacity) then there is no assurance that any of the usual things that might help the batteries charge sensibly or not set themselves alight in the charger etc are definitely going to apply.

BTW you can call me a cynic if you like but I have seen very few battery packs in commercial power tools etc that are genuinely robustly designed, in that they all charge cells in series. This leads to the very real possibility of unbalanced charges, and all kinds of weird problems if one cell in a series stack starts to self discharge.

I recently reviewed my collection of defunct cordless power tools and by far the most common failure has been the batteries. But then again I have also had motors fail, gearboxes clap out, electronics fry, and chargers go wonky. Between the lot of them I have spent enough money to have bought another 6er.... #-o

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Re: How to revive or recondition cordless power tool batteries

Post by GRNSHRK »

Reviving this thread so that I can post my experieinces :-({|=

Anybody try this successfully :-k

Well, I made attempts with 2 different battery packs and 2 different types of chargers, nada ](*,)

I checked polarity and all that prior, but when connecting and pluging in the chargers, there is no activity whatsoever, no indication that charging is taking place, etc. :-?

Using my DMM, both battery packs measure dead even at 0.000 VDC after [-(

Just curious if I am doing something wrong, if anybody did successfully recharge using this method, any feedback at all would be welcomed =D>
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Re: How to revive or recondition cordless power tool batteries

Post by Da_Hose »

Heya Bobbo,

This refresh technique only works with older batteries that have really simple electronics for monitoring heat and voltage. Any current generation LiOn and many NiMH batteries have more sophisticated circuitry that cuts off when they drop below a target voltage. That is because running a LiOn battery to 0 volts will kill it the first time it happens. NiMH batteries are more tolenrant, and you can even revive them sometimes by sort of "jolting" them with higher voltage to break up sulfation.

I did rebuild a NiMH battery pack once for a network testing tool with good success. In that case we are talking about a $5000 tool, with $400 batteries, so it was well worth the effort. I have opened up a few current generation power tool batteries, and they have proven not to be worth trying to revive. For me, if it is a current generation tool, I just purchase a new battery, and recycle the old one.

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Re: How to revive or recondition cordless power tool batteries

Post by GRNSHRK »

Just ordered a replacement on line yesterday Jose, relatively cheap, $23 shipped =D>

Hope it works [-o<

So, question, I was under the impression that once charged, the battery should not remain in the charger :-?

Any truth to that rumor :-k

Sure would be easier to just keep it there and not worry about it, so that it's ready to go for the next honeydo project \:D/
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Re: How to revive or recondition cordless power tool batteries

Post by Pod »

That’s an interesting question. On the face of it, these chargers shut themselves off once a defined period of time has elapsed or a full charge is registered. So there’s little point in leaving them connected anyway as they aren’t like battery trickle chargers which are designed to plug in and leave.

My method (when I remember) is to recharge the battery every few months so the charge doesn’t drop to zero. It’s only when they are completely dead that I need to utilise the “fix” I originally outlined!
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Re: How to revive or recondition cordless power tool batteries

Post by bpoliakoff »

For guys in the States and for the simpler battery operated tools like drills screw guns impact guns etc, buy Rigid brand from Home Depot. They have a no questions asked life time warranty on the batteries. It goes bad they exchange it. Just make sure you fill out the warranty card when you bring it home.
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