I have a Porter Cable 9.6V drill. It came with three battery packs.
I usually use two and switch between them.
It's in my handyman's bag, and I use it once every few weeks.
Well, when I plugged the battery pack into the carger unit, pack #1
flashed both red and green LED's. That means the battery's no good.
So I charge up the third pack, while using pack #2. So far so good.
I recharged #2 and #3 a couple of times. I think.
So now, #2 flashes red and green while charging. So i popped in #3,
and it too fails. Why would two packs fail at the same time?
It seems like all three failed within two month's timeframe (as I
said, I don;t use it much).
Is it the battery packs? Or the charger?
It seems strange that all three would fail at about the same time.
Since the charger is $80, and two battery packs are also about $80,
it's expensive to guess wrong. I didn't like the drill, so I'm
thinking a new one around Cristmas...
I was just wondering if others have seen this (multiple battery packs
failing at same time), or is it just me?
On Sun, 08 Nov 2009 08:34:40 -0800, evodawg <[email protected]>
wrote:
>Maxwell Lol wrote:
>
>> I have a Porter Cable 9.6V drill. It came with three battery packs.
>> I usually use two and switch between them.
>> It's in my handyman's bag, and I use it once every few weeks.
>>
>> Well, when I plugged the battery pack into the carger unit, pack #1
>> flashed both red and green LED's. That means the battery's no good.
>>
>> So I charge up the third pack, while using pack #2. So far so good.
>>
>> I recharged #2 and #3 a couple of times. I think.
>>
>> So now, #2 flashes red and green while charging. So i popped in #3,
>> and it too fails. Why would two packs fail at the same time?
>>
>> It seems like all three failed within two month's timeframe (as I
>> said, I don;t use it much).
>>
>> Is it the battery packs? Or the charger?
>>
>> It seems strange that all three would fail at about the same time.
>>
>> Since the charger is $80, and two battery packs are also about $80,
>> it's expensive to guess wrong. I didn't like the drill, so I'm
>> thinking a new one around Cristmas...
>>
>> I was just wondering if others have seen this (multiple battery packs
>> failing at same time), or is it just me?
>
>If this is a new PC then I would take it to your nearest PC authorized
>service center and try to trade up to a Dewalt. I also would not purchase
>anymore PC products since Black and Decker has destroyed the brand. PC is
>now a worthless piece of junk and I say this from prior experience. Bought
>a PC 18volt drill a few months back and it failed 2 weeks into it's life.
>Took it to a service center and was told they could not get parts for it.
>They ended up giving me a new Dewalt.
>You might look at the new Makita's they are light and have great power. I
>use a cordless everyday and am very happy with the Makita and the Dewalt
>but the Dewalt is heavy.
Look into the Bosch. I have (older) Makitas, (older) PC, and a few
Dewalts (12V and 2x18V) and Boschs (12V) I bought in the couple of
years. The Bosch are far and away the best of the bunch. If I didn't
have the 18V Dewalts I'd certainly go for the bigger Bosch drivers.
I'll give the 12V Dewalts to my son the next time we visit.
patrick <[email protected]> writes:
> Have a multimeter handy? Check the battery and see what the voltage
I'll try this. Thanks!
"Ed Pawlowski" <[email protected]> writes:
> "Maxwell Lol" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>>
>> It seems strange that all three would fail at about the same time.
>>
>
> Not to me. They were made about the same time and will fail about the same
> time. Get them rebuilt by www.primecell.com or similar and they can be
> better than news.
Thanks for the link. It looks like 2 rebuilt 9.6V NiCD batteries would
be $50+$10 (shipping).
krw <[email protected]> writes:
> Look into the Bosch.
Hmm. At Home Depot, the only cordless Bosch is $284. My wife won't
spend that much on me.
Let's check Amazon and Lowes
I see several on Amazon
Bosch PS20-2A 12-Volt Max Lithium-Ion Pocket Driver with 2 Batteries $103.56
Bosch PS30-2A 12-Volt Max 3/8-Inch Drill Driver $131.47
Bosch PS40-2A 12-Volt Max Lithium-Ion Impact Driver $141.47
Lowes at the first two at a cheaper price than Amazon! $99 and $129.
I'm not sure if I need the Impact Driver, and Lowes doesn't carry it.
I like the 2-year warrantee on the batteries.
And my wife likes to buy it in a store.
This looks like a strong contender. Thanks!
evodawg <[email protected]> writes:
> If this is a new PC then I would take it to your nearest PC authorized
> service center and try to trade up to a Dewalt.
It's not new. I got it about 4-5 years ago. This was when the wreck was
recommending PC. Since then, PC's reputation has gone downhill.
> You might look at the new Makita's they are light and have great power. I
> use a cordless everyday and am very happy with the Makita and the Dewalt
> but the Dewalt is heavy.
I had a Makita before, and I liked it. But the batteries died, so I
got a new drill with a 3-pack.
But the cheapest Makita on HD is $185 (14.4V Ni-MN). The LiON is $200
(with the 15% off, this is $170.) But it has a 1.5 aH battery (I
can't tell if it has 2 or not).
After reading the rant about LIOn batteries, I'm not very confident
that the $170 is money well spent.
It's a shame that the costs to replace batteries are nearly equivalent
to getting a new drill with 2 batteries. Are we at the age where
drills are like razors, and the real money is made in the
blades/batteries?
On Nov 8, 3:45=A0pm, Maxwell Lol <[email protected]> wrote:
> evodawg <[email protected]> writes:
> > If this is a new PC then I would take it to your nearest PC authorized
> > service center and try to trade up to a Dewalt.
>
> It's not new. I got it about 4-5 years ago. This was when the wreck was
> recommending PC. Since then, PC's reputation has gone downhill.
>
> > You might look at the new Makita's they are light and have great power.=
I
> > use a cordless everyday and am very happy with the Makita and the Dewal=
t
> > but the Dewalt is heavy.
>
> I had a Makita before, and I liked it. But the batteries died, so I
> got a new drill with a 3-pack.
>
> But the cheapest Makita on HD is $185 (14.4V Ni-MN). The LiON is $200
> (with the 15% off, this is $170.) =A0But it has a 1.5 aH battery (I
> can't tell if it has 2 or not).
>
> After reading the rant about LIOn batteries, I'm not very confident
> that the $170 is money well spent.
>
> It's a shame that the costs to replace batteries are nearly equivalent
> to getting a new drill with 2 batteries. Are we at the age where
> drills are like razors, and the real money is made in the
> blades/batteries?
Yes.
And it is intentional.
TMT
On Sun, 08 Nov 2009 10:46:18 -0800, Pilgrim <[email protected]>
wrote:
>In article <[email protected]>,
> krw <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> On Sun, 08 Nov 2009 10:22:23 -0500, Maxwell Lol <[email protected]>
>> wrote:
>>
>> >I have a Porter Cable 9.6V drill. It came with three battery packs.
>> >I usually use two and switch between them.
>> >It's in my handyman's bag, and I use it once every few weeks.
>> >
>> >Well, when I plugged the battery pack into the carger unit, pack #1
>> >flashed both red and green LED's. That means the battery's no good.
>> >
>> >So I charge up the third pack, while using pack #2. So far so good.
>> >
>> >I recharged #2 and #3 a couple of times. I think.
>> >
>> >So now, #2 flashes red and green while charging. So i popped in #3,
>> >and it too fails. Why would two packs fail at the same time?
>> >
>> >It seems like all three failed within two month's timeframe (as I
>> >said, I don;t use it much).
>> >
>> >Is it the battery packs? Or the charger?
>> >
>> >It seems strange that all three would fail at about the same time.
>> >
>> >Since the charger is $80, and two battery packs are also about $80,
>> >it's expensive to guess wrong. I didn't like the drill, so I'm
>> >thinking a new one around Cristmas...
>> >
>> >I was just wondering if others have seen this (multiple battery packs
>> >failing at same time), or is it just me?
>>
>Most batteries fail from age, not use. So,if, they are all the same age
>they will all fail about the same time.
That is simply not true. Li, for example, has a very definite number
of recharge cycles, usually something like 500. It doesn't matter
much over what time period or the depth of the cycles, 500ish is all
you get.
BTW, I have a few 30yo GE NiCds that still hold a charge. Every once
in a while I run across them and give 'em a charge to see.
Have a multimeter handy? Check the battery and see what the voltage
is.I had a similar problem where there was one cell that was dead. The
charger recognized this as a defect and wouldn't allow the charge. I
touched the contact tabs on the battery with 12 volts from another
battery (+ to +. - to-) for a bit of time. Nothing like a long time
(perhaps a couple seconds) then took another reading on the
multimeter. The voltage was then close to what the battery should have
been. The charger then went ahead and charged the battery normally. I
don't think this works with nimh cells, only with the nicad type cell.
As an aside, I've also gone and bought a cheapy battery from harbor
freight and cannibalized the individual cells to cob together a pack
for a dewalt battery pack. It was way less than the capacity of the
original pack but took a charge and was used as a backup by a neighbor
for a couple yrs before that too died. The h freight pack was all of
10 dolla and the dewalt pack was screwed not boded together so that
made the replacing of the cells straightforward. I ended up soldering
as opposed to welding the cell tabs together and it worked fine
(though they weren't dropped or abused). I hate the idea of tossing a
usable drill simply because of the bad batteries. Hells bells, you
could probably make up a connector and run the 9.6 drill off of 12
volts dc. Pat
Maxwell Lol wrote:
> I have a Porter Cable 9.6V drill. It came with three battery packs.
> I usually use two and switch between them.
> It's in my handyman's bag, and I use it once every few weeks.
>
> Well, when I plugged the battery pack into the carger unit, pack #1
> flashed both red and green LED's. That means the battery's no good.
>
> So I charge up the third pack, while using pack #2. So far so good.
>
> I recharged #2 and #3 a couple of times. I think.
>
> So now, #2 flashes red and green while charging. So i popped in #3,
> and it too fails. Why would two packs fail at the same time?
>
> It seems like all three failed within two month's timeframe (as I
> said, I don;t use it much).
>
> Is it the battery packs? Or the charger?
>
> It seems strange that all three would fail at about the same time.
>
> Since the charger is $80, and two battery packs are also about $80,
> it's expensive to guess wrong. I didn't like the drill, so I'm
> thinking a new one around Cristmas...
>
> I was just wondering if others have seen this (multiple battery packs
> failing at same time), or is it just me?
If this is a new PC then I would take it to your nearest PC authorized
service center and try to trade up to a Dewalt. I also would not purchase
anymore PC products since Black and Decker has destroyed the brand. PC is
now a worthless piece of junk and I say this from prior experience. Bought
a PC 18volt drill a few months back and it failed 2 weeks into it's life.
Took it to a service center and was told they could not get parts for it.
They ended up giving me a new Dewalt.
You might look at the new Makita's they are light and have great power. I
use a cordless everyday and am very happy with the Makita and the Dewalt
but the Dewalt is heavy.
Good Luck
--
"You can lead them to LINUX
but you can't make them THINK"
Running Mandriva release 2008.0 free-i586 using KDE on i586
Website Address http://rentmyhusband.biz/
"Maxwell Lol" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>
> It seems strange that all three would fail at about the same time.
>
Not to me. They were made about the same time and will fail about the same
time. Get them rebuilt by www.primecell.com or similar and they can be
better than news.
In article <[email protected]>,
krw <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Sun, 08 Nov 2009 10:22:23 -0500, Maxwell Lol <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
> >I have a Porter Cable 9.6V drill. It came with three battery packs.
> >I usually use two and switch between them.
> >It's in my handyman's bag, and I use it once every few weeks.
> >
> >Well, when I plugged the battery pack into the carger unit, pack #1
> >flashed both red and green LED's. That means the battery's no good.
> >
> >So I charge up the third pack, while using pack #2. So far so good.
> >
> >I recharged #2 and #3 a couple of times. I think.
> >
> >So now, #2 flashes red and green while charging. So i popped in #3,
> >and it too fails. Why would two packs fail at the same time?
> >
> >It seems like all three failed within two month's timeframe (as I
> >said, I don;t use it much).
> >
> >Is it the battery packs? Or the charger?
> >
> >It seems strange that all three would fail at about the same time.
> >
> >Since the charger is $80, and two battery packs are also about $80,
> >it's expensive to guess wrong. I didn't like the drill, so I'm
> >thinking a new one around Cristmas...
> >
> >I was just wondering if others have seen this (multiple battery packs
> >failing at same time), or is it just me?
>
Most batteries fail from age, not use. So,if, they are all the same age
they will all fail about the same time.
Chuck P.
On Sun, 08 Nov 2009 10:22:23 -0500, Maxwell Lol <[email protected]>
wrote:
>I have a Porter Cable 9.6V drill. It came with three battery packs.
>I usually use two and switch between them.
>It's in my handyman's bag, and I use it once every few weeks.
>
>Well, when I plugged the battery pack into the carger unit, pack #1
>flashed both red and green LED's. That means the battery's no good.
>
>So I charge up the third pack, while using pack #2. So far so good.
>
>I recharged #2 and #3 a couple of times. I think.
>
>So now, #2 flashes red and green while charging. So i popped in #3,
>and it too fails. Why would two packs fail at the same time?
>
>It seems like all three failed within two month's timeframe (as I
>said, I don;t use it much).
>
>Is it the battery packs? Or the charger?
>
>It seems strange that all three would fail at about the same time.
>
>Since the charger is $80, and two battery packs are also about $80,
>it's expensive to guess wrong. I didn't like the drill, so I'm
>thinking a new one around Cristmas...
>
>I was just wondering if others have seen this (multiple battery packs
>failing at same time), or is it just me?
You might send one of the batteries out to have it refurbished (new
cells). It generally costs about half what a new pack costs. I had
the cells for my 14.4V Porter Cable drill replaced for about $35,
IIRC. They're good as new. You can also do it yourself but I found
it didn't save much money.
Maxwell Lol wrote:
> I have a Porter Cable 9.6V drill. It came with three battery packs.
> I usually use two and switch between them.
> It's in my handyman's bag, and I use it once every few weeks.
[snip]
Take the batteries AND the charger to a PC service center and have them
checked out. You didn't say how old the drill is; that is whether it
was made before thae brand was sold to B&D. It is possible that they
would fail in a cluster. If the charger checks out, the batteries can
be refurbished by primecell or a competitor. Good luck.
charged up and ready (for a nap),
jo4hn