vic008
Well-Known Member
My Ryobi mains charger thru an inverter didnt work but bought a Ryobi 12v in car charger that does the job.
What voltage is the Ryobi drill.My Ryobi mains charger thru an inverter didnt work but bought a Ryobi 12v in car charger that does the job.
Charging an 18volt battery. Cost (equivalent )for the car charger would have been 50quidWhat voltage is the Ryobi drill.
I will check if Guild do an in-car charger
My drill is the same setup as you describe. Unfortunately the link you provide works fine but the converter doesn’t ship to UK. I can’t find an in car charger for my brand of drill.My Ryobi 18v drill has a charge cradle where the charge controls are inside. OP drill may be the same. The cradle is power by a wall wart ie transformer/power supply which olugs in to 240v. It would be easy to supply the 20 odd volts of the transformer from a 12v source. Here a some boost converters. 400W DC-DC Step-up Boost Voltage Converter Constant Current Power Supply Module 741870930898 | eBay
I understand there are all sorts of boost converters available for charging laptop computers where 18volts or more are produced which should suit your drillMy drill is the same setup as you describe. Unfortunately the link you provide works fine but the converter doesn’t ship to UK. I can’t find an in car charger for my brand of drill.
20 quid programmable charger as I suggested would have done the job.The boost converter gave 0.00 volts output when connected to a 12.6 volt source. Now in dispute with the supplier.
Any recommendations for a boost converter that works!
But i have given up on the idea of recharging the batteries. I would like to run the drill from the boat batteries via a boost converter. Would the programmable charger cope with that scenario?20 quid programmable charger as I suggested would have done the job.
But i have given up on the idea of recharging the batteries. I would like to run the drill from the boat batteries via a boost converter. Would the programmable charger cope with that scenario?
Put some load on it for testing (e.g. a 5W car light bulb), many switchmode dc-dc converters can't go to 0% duty cycle and would just switch off the output without a load. If that is the case with your converter and it also does not have auto-restart when load is applied, this particular converter would not work with the drill. But try it with the light bulb first.The boost converter gave 0.00 volts output when connected to a 12.6 volt source. Now in dispute with the supplier.
Any recommendations for a boost converter that works!
Problem with hobby chargers in Li mode is most of them refuse to cooperate if the balancing lead is not connected. OP says his battery only has 3 connectors so battery surgery would be needed to get at the individual cells.20 quid programmable charger as I suggested would have done the job.
Try with a light bulb connected to the output before you apply power to the converter.I tried the booster with the drill as a load but no joy. I also tried the drill on the12.6 volts car battery and that didn,t work either.
With the results I’ve seen, i think a 14.4 drill will expect 16 volts so it also won’t work.
Problem with hobby chargers in Li mode is most of them refuse to cooperate if the balancing lead is not connected. OP says his battery only has 3 connectors so battery surgery would be needed to get at the individual cells.
I think you are correct about the power/torque from a budget drill, but I was prepared to sacrifice my cheapo to see if it could shift the halyard before buying a 2:1 dyneema halyard.Try with a light bulb connected to the output before you apply power to the converter.
I don't think any of the 12V drills or a 18V drill powered directly from 12V would be strong enough for the job.