laika
Well-Known Member
[EDIT: Utterly wrong premise to the question: Mis-calclated in a moment of madness based on 240v cos it's a 240v charger innit. But of course it's an 18v battery.... Please ignore]
I have a truly rubbish drill my father bought in aldi and gave me. I've always wanted a decent one. Today was spent researching the Makita range and I was just about to hit "buy" when it occurred to me to work out whether my inverter would handle the charging.
The Makita battery charger specs don't give power draw but interpolating from battery capacity and charge time the charger looks to be pulling an average of at least 1.6kW charging a 4Ah battery.
Is the deal with cordless tools generally that you need a generator or an enormous inverter to recharge the batteries?
I do actually have a generator but I'd *really* like to get rid of it in favour of solar/hydro
I have a truly rubbish drill my father bought in aldi and gave me. I've always wanted a decent one. Today was spent researching the Makita range and I was just about to hit "buy" when it occurred to me to work out whether my inverter would handle the charging.
The Makita battery charger specs don't give power draw but interpolating from battery capacity and charge time the charger looks to be pulling an average of at least 1.6kW charging a 4Ah battery.
Is the deal with cordless tools generally that you need a generator or an enormous inverter to recharge the batteries?
I do actually have a generator but I'd *really* like to get rid of it in favour of solar/hydro
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