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#1
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battery charger voltage query
Hi all,
looking to replace my cordless drill on the boat with something a bit better. I am looking at a panasonic and have found the prices extremely cheap in the US but I need to get the charger to work with 240 volts not 110volts. Is it possible to modify a battery charger to do this or would I need to use a step up type voltage converter? TIA AD |
#2
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battery charger voltage query
My understanding ... you want to buy a 110 to use with 240? If so, you want
to step down from 240 to 110. If it was me, and it was for a boat, I'd get a transformer to do that for me ... that way I could accomodate various 110 equipments. For example, when I was in Australia ... at a Radio Shack there, I could have aquired a (step down) transformer to accomodate my 110 stuff (I got by by asking around and borrowing). "AD" wrote in message ... Hi all, looking to replace my cordless drill on the boat with something a bit better. I am looking at a panasonic and have found the prices extremely cheap in the US but I need to get the charger to work with 240 volts not 110volts. Is it possible to modify a battery charger to do this or would I need to use a step up type voltage converter? TIA AD |
#3
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battery charger voltage query
Site that may of interest ... http://kropla.com/electric2.htm
"bowgus" wrote in message able.rogers.com... My understanding ... you want to buy a 110 to use with 240? If so, you want to step down from 240 to 110. If it was me, and it was for a boat, I'd get a transformer to do that for me ... that way I could accomodate various 110 equipments. For example, when I was in Australia ... at a Radio Shack there, I could have aquired a (step down) transformer to accomodate my 110 stuff (I got by by asking around and borrowing). "AD" wrote in message ... Hi all, looking to replace my cordless drill on the boat with something a bit better. I am looking at a panasonic and have found the prices extremely cheap in the US but I need to get the charger to work with 240 volts not 110volts. Is it possible to modify a battery charger to do this or would I need to use a step up type voltage converter? TIA AD |
#4
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battery charger voltage query
Hi AD,
take a look at the data sheet or instruction manual of that charger, you want to buy with your new drill. Some chargers have a wide area of voltage, because they are sold all over the world. The modern chargers use switching power sypply and the it is no problem to built them for for voltages between 60 and 240 V. I´m planning to use my old cordless drill on my boat too. Because I have only battery power supply, I´m going to connect the drill directly to my 12 V power. Maybe that`s another idea for you. Drill voltage must be the same as onboard voltage and the cordless drill gets a cord. That cord will make only problems on a ship of some 100 m og length.... Jürgen "AD" schrieb im Newsbeitrag ... Hi all, looking to replace my cordless drill on the boat with something a bit better. I am looking at a panasonic and have found the prices extremely cheap in the US but I need to get the charger to work with 240 volts not 110volts. Is it possible to modify a battery charger to do this or would I need to use a step up type voltage converter? TIA AD |
#5
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battery charger voltage query
I bought a nice cordless drill in a junk shop for $2. They couldn't
get it to charge, so sold it off cheap. The problem was the wall charger was dead. So, I cut the cable off the wall DC power supply and put a current limiting/voltage dropping light bulb (12v in case the cord gets shorted to ground) in series with the + lead to the 12V house battery. The bulb is rated 12V at 6W for a low voltage sidewalk light at hardware stores. The drill battery pack is 7.2V. If the battery pack is nearly charged up, 13V minus 7.2V equals 5.8V across the bulb. Now, the bulb draws .5A at 12V (6W/12V=.5A). At half voltage, it'll draw about .25A, half current. (Bulbs are not linear but for charging drill motors noone cares.) This charging current is far below the C cell Ni-MH desired charging current in any case so I get a nice trickle charge and the battery pack gets barely warm at full charge. The light bulb is quite bright when the battery is dead and dims as the battery pack voltage rises towards full charge, giving me a coarse indication of its charge status. I use the drill, mostly as a screwdriver, then simply plug it back into the light bulb when I'm done with it. Slow charging gives you LOTS more capacity...(c; You can't charge a 12V Ni-Cd from 12V reliably. Ni-Cd and Ni-MH cells are CURRENT charged, not float voltage charged. It would be hard to get a good grip on a series resistance that would give you stable current for them. On Tue, 23 Mar 2004 07:50:53 +0100, "Jürgen Spelter" wrote: Hi AD, take a look at the data sheet or instruction manual of that charger, you want to buy with your new drill. Some chargers have a wide area of voltage, because they are sold all over the world. The modern chargers use switching power sypply and the it is no problem to built them for for voltages between 60 and 240 V. I´m planning to use my old cordless drill on my boat too. Because I have only battery power supply, I´m going to connect the drill directly to my 12 V power. Maybe that`s another idea for you. Drill voltage must be the same as onboard voltage and the cordless drill gets a cord. That cord will make only problems on a ship of some 100 m og length.... Jürgen "AD" schrieb im Newsbeitrag ... Hi all, looking to replace my cordless drill on the boat with something a bit better. I am looking at a panasonic and have found the prices extremely cheap in the US but I need to get the charger to work with 240 volts not 110volts. Is it possible to modify a battery charger to do this or would I need to use a step up type voltage converter? TIA AD Larry W4CSC POWER is our friend! |
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