How to Bring NI-CAD Drill Batteries Back to Life & Make Them Charge Again - Ryobi

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  • Опубликовано: 17 сен 2024
  • Use this trick to save $$$ - This is how I bring Nicad Batteries back to life when they will no longer charge or the go dead quickly between charges.
    Make Lithium batteries charge again here: • How to Make Lithium Dr...
    Rebuilding NiCad Battery Pack: • Rebuilding Snap-On 18V...
    AC Adapter like the one used in this video: amzn.to/2oBFRqk
    Welder Used in this Video: amzn.to/2qXqxVM
    See all My favorite Parts, Supplies and Tools in my Amazon Store:
    www.amazon.com...

Комментарии • 934

  • @frugalprepper
    @frugalprepper  6 лет назад +26

    You can see how to make Lithium batteries charge again here: ruclips.net/video/NeFSqjIrlbo/видео.html

    • @petedaniels6899
      @petedaniels6899 6 лет назад +2

      FrugalPrepper what a cowboy

    • @stanjamerson9695
      @stanjamerson9695 6 лет назад +1

      Pete Daniels ,ouhuuuuu
      U
      UuLluuu

    • @shanecourvoisier6917
      @shanecourvoisier6917 6 лет назад +1

      U

    • @grantbennett333
      @grantbennett333 6 лет назад +1

      FrugalPrepper's Garage & Garden
      NASA HOAX man never been to the moon. The Earth is flat. All fake Satalites Dinosaurs nukes lotto ticket globe Earth...plz chk.it out
      Kind Regards

    • @harrys.3165
      @harrys.3165 5 лет назад +3

      Smoking near batteries is not really a great idea.

  • @michaeltrevorpurnell9423
    @michaeltrevorpurnell9423 6 лет назад +47

    This guy gives so much of his time helping others (this helpful tip is brilliant,and it works) why are there so many negative people giving him shit?, if he wants to smoke surely that is his choice.

    • @charleswalter2902
      @charleswalter2902 5 лет назад +5

      I'm a non smoker, I've chosen that course of action. This creator chooses to smoke & it's his fucking business not yours, you judgemental turds.
      I really resent do gooders who think they need to supervise others on how they should live their lives.

    • @danieldoucet9121
      @danieldoucet9121 4 года назад +2

      @@charleswalter2902 I agree, he's sharing knowledge and obviously cares about the environment. We need more people like him.

    • @jecammer
      @jecammer 4 года назад

      Haters will be haters there’s nothing you can do, it makes them feel big to try to make others feel small. They need to get a new hobby.

  • @fraglerian558
    @fraglerian558 6 лет назад +5

    I loved this. When it didn't work you weren't bothered, just tried again. This speaks of real. Thank-you for the video.

    • @frugalprepper
      @frugalprepper  4 года назад +2

      I never thought this video would get more than a 1000 views let alone 1.5 million. If I did I would have done a better job. Maybe I should make a new one that answers all the common questions people have.

  • @PeterWhiteVoiceTalent
    @PeterWhiteVoiceTalent 4 года назад +8

    Great ref. material here! I bought almost new Ryobi drill/charger w 2 batts at goodwill for $7.50. Batt NG. Tried your method and YES MAN!! Works great. Let the haters hate, I think yer great!

  • @user-yq2wk6yg8s
    @user-yq2wk6yg8s 4 года назад +1

    The thing I like about this video is it shows the reality of a fixer's life. Nothing ever goes right all the time, or at least not for long. So he's in the middle of filming and the multimeter starts playing up. That's so real. One out of three of the batteries is a failure but you can't resist giving it one more try. Great job, Frugal!

  • @GamingKeenBeaner
    @GamingKeenBeaner 4 года назад +7

    If you continue to do this, you would really benefit from putting some wire leads on the battery so that you arc against the wire ends and not directly against the contacts.

  • @tiggywinkle1000
    @tiggywinkle1000 3 года назад

    My 20 years+ old Bosch drill/driver's battery (NiCd) packed up.
    I sawed off the base of the pack and found 6 cells inside, wired in series.
    Removed them with side cutters, making a drawing of where they went, polarity, etc.
    Ordered 6 modern NiMH cells (Batteriesplus), with twice the Ah capacity and higher current capability (more power). They arrived fully charged in 48 hours.
    Soldered them all back into the case (the cells have solder tags) and fastened them with the hot melt glue gun. Then glued the base back with Superglue, and painted over the cut to conceal the repair.
    The old charger works fine with the new battery, you just have to time the charge using NiMH, and not leave it on permanently.
    The repair saved me over £50, and my old Bosch drill works better than new with its upgrade!

    • @frugalprepper
      @frugalprepper  3 года назад +1

      yeah replacing the cells, especially with NiMh is better for sure.

  • @braeburn2333
    @braeburn2333 6 лет назад +15

    Ive done this but i used two good tool batteries wired in series to form a 36 V cell. I used that to zap the bad batteries instead of a welder. It worked well.

    • @rogerd4559
      @rogerd4559 4 года назад +3

      I wonder if my 50 amp battery charger/car starter would do the job?

  • @stephenjones4610
    @stephenjones4610 3 года назад

    You just saved me having to buy another battery...worked after 6 "resets"....Perfect, thanks!

  • @haroldkline4898
    @haroldkline4898 6 лет назад +8

    Thanks a lot dude! I don't have a welder, but I was able to get them working again using a car battery (in parallel) that puts out about 2700 Watts. They went from reading flat zeros to about 7 volts and now are taking a charge. Great tip!

    • @stinkycheese804
      @stinkycheese804 4 года назад +4

      You don't even need a massive battery or welder. A plain old 12VDC wall wart, or laptop power brick, etc (though you need current limiting resistor to keep the PSU running if it's a regulated type with an undervoltage shutdown protection circuit) connected to a good sized capacitor bank will allow zapping with plenty of current to burn through the dendrites shorting out the cell. Obviously not everyone has a "good sized capacitor bank" lying around (lol) but if you're going to go the route of zapping cells, then realize that you're going to have to keep doing it and it may be worth the bother to make a capacitor bank to do so, so you aren't trudging out to where a car battery is every time. Then again a sane person would just buy a new battery.

  • @stevenpeterson8596
    @stevenpeterson8596 6 лет назад +3

    Awesome video. What I really love is that you didn't cut out all your mistakes. Very helpful to those of us prone to making them ourselves

  • @mr.wizard2974
    @mr.wizard2974 5 лет назад +4

    Necessity is the mother of invention. Improvisation is the mother-in-law! Good job man!

  • @Jamespennington71
    @Jamespennington71 5 лет назад +2

    I tried this with just a pair of 12v car batteries and some jumper cables to make 24v and holy crap it worked! I had six old Ryobi ni-cads that hadn't charged in at least 10 years but I kept them hoping I'd find a tip like this. Thanks man!

  • @TheCarnager
    @TheCarnager 6 лет назад +7

    It's the high voltage pulse that knocks those whiskers off, the bendini magnet motor design does same thing and can help restore batteries the same way.

    • @frugalprepper
      @frugalprepper  6 лет назад

      Yes a bendini would work. I don't have one of those though.

    • @BigDaddyJonas
      @BigDaddyJonas 5 лет назад

      Bendini magnet motor

    • @fieldburn
      @fieldburn 5 лет назад

      TheCarnager can you do a video on how to bring your battery back so that you can charge it again

  • @wholeNwon
    @wholeNwon 6 лет назад

    YT video from some young guy who suggested putting the battery in the charger and plugging and unplugging the charger from the receptacle several times in rapid succession to cause charging to resume. I really doubted that it would work, but it sure DID! I was amazed and thanked him.

  • @williamdmason9375
    @williamdmason9375 6 лет назад +3

    I admire your persistence

  • @johnbrown4897
    @johnbrown4897 6 лет назад +45

    After seeing this I tried it on my 3 18v dewalt 100% flat batterys which has been in my store room unused for 6 years I used my battery charger on 24v with full 30 amp out put to spike the dead batteries 6 times each and to my surprise all 3 recharged on the dewalt charger and are working fine.

    • @randystuckel5765
      @randystuckel5765 6 лет назад

      John Brown

    • @aubreygiebel5346
      @aubreygiebel5346 6 лет назад

      John Brown

    • @nashtvguy
      @nashtvguy 6 лет назад +2

      I was wondering what might work if a guy didn't have a welder. I'll try the battery charger. Thanks for this tip.

    • @somewhitedude01
      @somewhitedude01 6 лет назад

      Do you think a quick jokt of 110 volts would be too much?

    • @toddsmith1976
      @toddsmith1976 6 лет назад +5

      WAIT, STOP, NO THATS BAD! Don't use an A/C power source if that's what you mean. The chances of having an explosion will be far greater. Its like trying to jump your dead car battery off from your neighbors running car backwards. Instead of negative to negative and positive to positive, you either have a brain fart or you just made a one time careless mistake and hook it up backwards. It will probably internally fry or explode both batteries, spraying battery acid onto every piece of uncovered skin on yours and everone else in the areas entire body, damage both cars entire electrical system, including the ECU, otherwise known as the vehicles electronic brains, $$$. You don't ever want jump a battery off without a full respect for every step of the procedure. If you accidentally or otherwise use alternating current, or in other words, the power that comes out of your home's wall outlets, in this already highly risky little hack, it will probably least of all do permanent or irreversable damage to an otherwise salvageable battery pack. It has the potiential to take your freakin face all the way off, and probably burn your house down too, and just radiating collateral damage from there. There are no words to describe this god awful blood bath nightmare. There is just no way to even begin to really imagine the horrible consequences and regret. It has happened many many times before, and will continue to happen to many many more in the future. The danger is super real.
      This hack, working with batteries, or working with electronic and electricity period requires training, and an understanding, and the respect on a level that most will never know anything about for the life and death dangers involved. Saftey has to never be neglected, because something will happen eventually to even the safest and best professionals and practioners in the business. So please, do not even attemp this without having a good working knowledge of basic electricity. Ask someone to help you do this if you don't have total confidence in your knowledge and abilities. Frugal prepper says more than a few times that even under the best circumstances, there is a real possibility for things to really bad, really quick. That is real talk my friend. I speak from practical experience. 3 years college to be a federally certified aircraft mechanic, A&P certified. I maintained 5.0 GPA every time from day one to graduation. I graduated valedictorian, I had extensive studies in electronics and electricity, and I've got over ten years expeience on the job as a licensed professional specializing in electronics and electrical systems. I have seen some accidents on the job. And I have seen people lose theIr lives while at work doing the same thing that I had been doing all week. I don't talk about it. I only say now because I can't overstress how the danger we're looking at here is the very same seriousness. When I consider the people that I respect and that are an inspiration to me because of there knowledge and level of expertise, I can easily admit that in contrast between them and myself, I am like a baby that don't know jack. I have had the privilage of working with and learning from some amazing people. Not many, but some, very few would I actually say really they do have that broad and solid understanding of the craft and can manipulation electro-mechanical energy that our modern state of the art technology is baised on. It is more like devine magic than scientific fact. There are many aspects of it that the human race still doesn't understand. Even some basic things such as fundanental laws. Even Tesla almost electricuted himself to death at least once. hat anything else I know of. not everything by a long shoot, but far more than the other 98% percent of those in this feild, what electo-machanical energy. Be cautious and us descretion when duplicating DIY projects seen all over youtube.
      But going on with this refresh hack, I'm not positive what Frugal said about the voltage he was using in the video for sure without going back, I think those small welders usually run around 17 volts DC.
      Therorically you want to swap his current value over to your volts because that value is around 100. I think you said 110volt to be exact. Likewise, his volts value will now be your current or amperage value. So, you will use something like 110 volts DC power source with a maximum current output value of 17amps. The value of the Voltage and current variations are directly related when the intention is to maintain the same power output. In this instsnce, because our load or what ever you applying this power to, the battery to be refreshed, is the same either way. When the load is changed things get alot more complicated. The load or resistance in a curcuit also directly affects the power consumption in a electrical curcuit. If all you want to do is revive a battery pack that is similar to what Mr. Frugal shows, then that is why the we can just swap these two major values and still come out with the same end result in essentially an identical way. The fact that the voltage is much higher makes no differece because you are also now using far less current. Same, same. You understand? The current is reduced according to it's relation to the increased voltage you are using. The 110 volts DC that you proposed is actually the easy conversion to calculate bucause you actually just swap those values and you will still be acheiving the same rusulting output or total energy or power. It is the energy being expended by that spark you see when you make contact with the positive and negative terminals of your battery you want to refresh with the positive and negative wires of your power supply you are useing if thats easier to understand in simple terms. It's measured in watts or joules. In addition you must further consider that Frugal says that he is used his power supply turned down to the low setting. By setting it to low power, the current is probably being limited to some reduced value while the voltage remains constant and unchanged. Maybe he can elaborate on some of the questions about his specifics in another comment or follow up vid. If I were to attempt this. And I still really don't know if I would. At least in the same manner as shown. I would gave to make it a little safer by doning it remotely with some shielding. Expect an explosion and try to at least make it a controled explosion with saftey measures in place. It's the same as Russian Rullet in every way the way we saw in the video. I like it. It's really smart. I didn't know it could be done, but Mr. Frugal seems to be a pretty sharp fellow and knows the facts about the things that he is talking about. There is alot to he said for that. Especially with all the ignorance that's going around on youtube. I learned a valuable trick here, but I would leave much less to chance. Another thing too as kind of after thought but deffinatly worth mentioning. All those batteries have a little currcuit board inside them that should probably be removed before you try to zap it. It is the battery charge management curcuit. You need that to function properly in order for your charger to begin and end the charging process after you have refreshed them and I suspect that frugal prepper may have damaged the one inside his battery pack that he nevr could get to start charging. Have fun learning by experimenting on your own. When we stop learning we stop living. Be safe and enjoy!

  • @johnmilner7603
    @johnmilner7603 5 лет назад +3

    Hitting it with a stick or mig welder will usually make the Charger see the batt as chargeable but once the Charger completes the charge, the drill will not last long on that charge. I tried this with my Milwaukee 12V. My fix was to buy a new 12V pack.

  • @dreadcat7756
    @dreadcat7756 6 лет назад

    Two days ago I put my Harbor Freight Drill battery on to charge it. Then forgot all about it until I saw your video. Ran down to the basement and checked it. Charger and battery very hot. Tried the battery and it still works. Hope I didn't ruin it! Thanks for the video.

  • @scorpnz4433
    @scorpnz4433 6 лет назад +3

    Wouldn't have believed it if i hadn't seen it.Going to enjoy the look on some friends faces when i tell em,they won't believe it..lol

  • @winstonpoole9906
    @winstonpoole9906 6 лет назад +1

    This Bloke should be renamed Spider... He never gives up !

  • @pedro2hd359
    @pedro2hd359 6 лет назад +21

    Hy... I am here in Brazil and I just get one Ryobi drill and the batterie stop working... with this video I could put working again... Thanks very much...

  • @robowmower2005
    @robowmower2005 3 года назад

    Brilliant, quick & effective. My garage is way more untidy!

  • @pasqualeredo
    @pasqualeredo 5 лет назад +4

    the (whiskers) you refer to are crystals that grow between the anode and cathode that end up SHORT CIRCUITING lithium ion batteries are called DENDRITES!

  • @rickkentner1713
    @rickkentner1713 6 лет назад +1

    That’s awesome! I have 5 dead and the tools are practically brand new. Problem is their about 8yrs old and I can’t buy new batteries. I’m gonna try this method, wish me luck. P.S. I was smoking while I watched. Cheers!

  • @RJCooper2
    @RJCooper2 5 лет назад +3

    Great idea -- a pair of welding gloves and a motorcycle helmet with a full face shield might also be prudent at any time you're playing with potentially explosive materials, or maybe set the battery on a blasting cabinet during that procedure. I just hate reading later about people with Burns over significantly large percentages of their bodies, just knowing how much I've suffered in the past from a tiny one of my finger.

  • @jecammer
    @jecammer 4 года назад +1

    Thank you, even TV doctors can’t bring them all back. Lol

  • @karlsomerville4549
    @karlsomerville4549 6 лет назад +10

    Dude, love your replies to all the useless haters! Good info! Cheers.

  • @kenjohnson5498
    @kenjohnson5498 2 года назад

    I did the same with my battery charger and it worked thank you for the video i now have working batteries

  • @thecentralscrutinizer5105
    @thecentralscrutinizer5105 4 года назад +4

    been doing this trick for years, and ya don't need a welder either, just use a line cord thats had the head cut off, strip off about 1/2 inch insulation on both wires,, u can insulate the insulation some more with either elec tape or couple layers of shrink tube,, and form wire "tips" off stripped ends, then pre-tin those for duration and rigidity ...then plug in line cord, and with extra caution, just tap your + &- leads on battery with the tips, it's ac voltage, so polarity doesn't matter ...I've had about an 88-90% success rate with ni-cad drill and roomba batterys

    • @frugalprepper
      @frugalprepper  4 года назад +1

      Just keep both wires in one hand so if you slip you don't get mains voltage through you heart.

    • @thecentralscrutinizer5105
      @thecentralscrutinizer5105 4 года назад

      @@frugalprepper Why didn't I think of that....D'ohhhh ;)

  • @raydreamer7566
    @raydreamer7566 4 года назад

    Wow I enjoy learning..... I always stored my NI-CAD fully charged - always. Now I learn I was giving my NI-CADS Batteries a slow death. I like this video and I am only half way through.

  • @jo3tag
    @jo3tag 6 лет назад +29

    If you don't have a welder, you can open the battery pack up and hit each individual cell with a 12v car charger the same way.

    • @frugalprepper
      @frugalprepper  6 лет назад +8

      That's a great idea. That would definitely work.

    • @lenywilliams7765
      @lenywilliams7765 6 лет назад +1

      FrugalPrepper's Garage & Garden & would b less work 2 !!!

    • @sparkimoto
      @sparkimoto 6 лет назад

      I'm gonna try that. Nothing else has worked.

    • @bobbrown7313
      @bobbrown7313 6 лет назад +2

      u could use a large car charger 100- 200 amps

    • @sgtbilkothe3rd
      @sgtbilkothe3rd 4 года назад

      At what amp setting? 2, 10, or 50 are my charger's choices.

  • @TheHandymanJason
    @TheHandymanJason 6 лет назад

    I pride myself with being a bit of a nerd but you sir are one in a whole new bracket... If Sheldon would watch this video he would be adding your face to one of his t-shirts!
    Thank you so much for the hack! You just saved me a lot of money!

    • @frugalprepper
      @frugalprepper  6 лет назад

      Who is Sheldon?

    • @frugalprepper
      @frugalprepper  4 года назад

      Sheldon is not a Nerd. He is a fictional character on TV that is nothing like real Nerds.

  • @hwnwhaler1
    @hwnwhaler1 6 лет назад +10

    You are the man for putting this info out. Thanks!!

  • @robertsymons4340
    @robertsymons4340 4 года назад

    I have a DeWalt lithium 18 v battery which wouldn't charge, it had been sitting in my shed for about six months. I took it apart, disconnected the electronics and spot charged it for a couple of seconds with my 24 volt DC battery charger. Reassembled the battery and electronics then put it on charge, no problem since, works well.

    • @frugalprepper
      @frugalprepper  4 года назад

      Sounds just like my other video on Lithium batteries.

  • @johnchristianhelmfelt8227
    @johnchristianhelmfelt8227 5 лет назад +8

    In my experience as I have worked with Ni-CD and Ni-Fe batteries, I have found that discharging the Ni-Cd below 1 Volt they will short circuit to a greater or lesser degree depending on the current, to eliminate the short safely I first tried 4700 uF x 35 volt capacitor discharged into each cell that was shorted generally it did not work as that value capacitor did not have enough energy stored to vaporize the short and low voltage can not force enough amperage through the higher resistance shorts, so I tried next a 4700 uF x 75 volt capacitor with better results, though I still was not enough to vaporize the low resistance shorts, so I went to use a 10.000 uF x 100 volt capacitor, this one was nearly perfect and to get better results I would recommend not to use a single capacitor but o use a bank of capacitors as some capacitor discharge welders have; it is not a good idea to make the discharge through the full battery pack as each cell has its own internal resistance that will reduce the current available to vaporize the short in the shorted cell.

    • @1001awab
      @1001awab 4 года назад +3

      Lots of talking. I had 2 flat batteries. No possibility to charge. Drill didn't worked at all. Connected 2 12 volt bat to make 24 volt. Connected the ryobi 18 volt for approx 10 seconds. They worked again. Showed 19 volt and they charging again. Much easier and save.

    • @haroldcohen183
      @haroldcohen183 4 года назад

      Lathe

  • @bobleclair5665
    @bobleclair5665 5 лет назад +1

    The industries should take it upon themselves to make all battery packs capable of changing individual batteries,,it would help bring down waste and pollution

  • @stevec5000
    @stevec5000 6 лет назад +9

    I can't believe this works but I zapped a dead Dewalt battery with my welder and it came right back up to 18 volts!

  • @originalgangsta5462
    @originalgangsta5462 5 лет назад +1

    The most important part of being a prepper is getting your body in shape

    • @frugalprepper
      @frugalprepper  5 лет назад +1

      I know you're popping in on and old video and you probably don't follow my channel. But it is well underway. ruclips.net/video/TN6iJBQJVbM/видео.html

  • @GG-ec5eg
    @GG-ec5eg 6 лет назад +11

    Great tip but even besides that is that the way you described how it works and what to do to fix it is one of the most informative methods I've ever came across. Now I knew all this all ready but was curious to watch and maybe it's just me and the way you described it paints a perfect picture and so easly understandable that if I never even touched a battery I'd feel though I'd be able to fix my batteries if need be.
    But anyways thought I'd share if your a teacher already awesome.
    If not you would make a good hands on technical teacher of sorts .

    • @frugalprepper
      @frugalprepper  4 года назад +1

      If you really want to learn something, teach It to someone.

  • @BradsWorkbench
    @BradsWorkbench 5 лет назад +2

    Congrats on the 1,000,000 views!

  • @tommyp8920
    @tommyp8920 6 лет назад +9

    This was an absolute gold find for information. Good job.

  • @51coronet
    @51coronet 4 года назад

    I have done this it does work. The batteries however don't come back like the day they were new but you can use them. I would guess at about 50% capacity from when new. Better than a battery that doesnt work at all.

  • @carolyng651
    @carolyng651 5 лет назад +6

    Let it cool after process for 1 hr then put on charge for 2-4 hrs. But you must let battery cool after polar process

  • @rogerwborden128
    @rogerwborden128 6 лет назад +2

    Thanks for the information I work for a sanitation and always find these batteries and hand tools I got two bags full of ryobi and few other types of brands that I always collected

  • @tomcosta47
    @tomcosta47 5 лет назад +10

    I love this guy he's really cool

  • @frankmichalski1457
    @frankmichalski1457 3 года назад

    I have those batteries, and they had no power. I had a fully charged battery, and 4 with no power, and the charger would not charge them. I saw a video, about a guy using 2 pairs of scissors, connecting positive to positive and neg to neg. I used a 12 gauge wire to connect pos to pos and neg to neg. I let them sit for a while, about an hour. To my surprise, the dead battery was then able to accept the charge, and keep it. All 4 are fully charged!

  • @s.e.hebert7307
    @s.e.hebert7307 6 лет назад +6

    The explanation is v. helpful!

    • @frugalprepper
      @frugalprepper  4 года назад +1

      Thanks, a lot of people didn't seem to like it.

  • @frankfarrester9178
    @frankfarrester9178 6 лет назад +2

    I've had good luck bringing them back by using a lithium 9v and hooking up wires to each end and reverse bumping the polarity 10 to 20 bumps

  • @WJack97224
    @WJack97224 4 года назад +3

    Heh, heh, heh...thanks for telling me what I should not have been doing. Education is soooo much fun. Good on ya mate.

  • @joshuabourgault3921
    @joshuabourgault3921 4 года назад

    Woah. A lot of valuable information. Too many dislikes. I learned so much about batteries from this one video. Thank you!

  • @harley121
    @harley121 6 лет назад +4

    I could have walked to the Lowes and back by now!!!!

  • @chichesterbuilders
    @chichesterbuilders 6 лет назад +1

    i always love a little science.. especially for us feild guys.. thanks buddy for this share..

    • @frugalprepper
      @frugalprepper  6 лет назад +1

      Thanks

    • @DavidSmith-qr1sg
      @DavidSmith-qr1sg 5 лет назад

      What about when you screw up lithium ion batteries touching wrong terminaals

  • @arthurdent8091
    @arthurdent8091 6 лет назад +3

    Nice trick, you could mention how much you have the welder set to.

    • @frugalprepper
      @frugalprepper  6 лет назад +1

      It is small 120V Welder on the LOW setting. It should be 50AMP AC output on the low settings.

    • @jimmytate7587
      @jimmytate7587 6 лет назад

      doesn't matter how high the current is set to. Its the voltage you need to be careful of.

  • @weldercamaro
    @weldercamaro 6 лет назад

    i mistakenly tried and fried to charging a rc nicad pack with a 12 volt car battery. they heat up then smoke then pop or explode maybe after 10 seconds. less than a second is relatively safe in my opinion . good video.

  • @smms1276
    @smms1276 5 лет назад +6

    👍 👍 WELL DONE, THANK YOU 👍

  • @curbwhisper
    @curbwhisper 6 лет назад +2

    I just take another identical charged cell and connect two in parallel for 5 to 10 seconds and they'll start charging again with the original charger. It has been working for 5 years now.

  • @RANDOUGHSURVIVOR
    @RANDOUGHSURVIVOR 7 лет назад +8

    I have to do the same thing with my RC batteries every year.

    • @rock4life808
      @rock4life808 6 лет назад +2

      Really?!? I have three of the 14volt Dewalt that have this same problem and one is the extra long life battery, and only after two or three years. But a few months ago I found an old 12volt ryobi I had forgotten I had with two batteries and a flashlight in the kit. I took and put both batteries on charge and guess what. They both took a charge and they were bought in the 90's. I have the 18volt Ryobi now that is getting to where not lasting as long as first did, but I have had them since around 2004. I think the kit has been well worth the $150 for the drill, recip saw, skill saw, and flashlight it came with.

    • @alfa7108
      @alfa7108 5 лет назад

      You still use ni cad rc batteries?

  • @UDX-21
    @UDX-21 4 года назад +1

    MCBRGA= Make CB Radio Great Again, Old Radio Night

    • @frugalprepper
      @frugalprepper  4 года назад +2

      I am not sure CB Radio was ever great or will be great again.

    • @UDX-21
      @UDX-21 4 года назад

      @@frugalprepper 10-4 on that. Just a hobby..

    • @frugalprepper
      @frugalprepper  4 года назад

      @@UDX-21 QSL 73

  • @sambo5562
    @sambo5562 6 лет назад +8

    It would have been nice for you to show us the one you did get working was first not working prior to you regenerating it.
    Question will this procedure work on the 18 volt Dewalt batteries.
    Was the welder on AC or DC setting and what was the voltage setting and the AMP load did you hit the batteries with.

    • @frugalprepper
      @frugalprepper  6 лет назад +2

      That was my intention, but I goofed up while videoing it. I never expected this video to be very popular or I would have made sure I did it again with another bad battery. Yes it will work on any NiCad battery as long as it doesn't have any circutry inside of it, for regulation, temperature sensing, or charge indicators on battery. I am repairing a Bewalt 18V right now for a friend that has 2 bad cells and it has no internal circuitry, but I don't know if there is more than one type of model of Dewalt 18V nicad battery.

    • @blaineanderson6814
      @blaineanderson6814 6 лет назад +1

      Im guessing the welder is on DC? Might be good to tell in your video

    • @johnnymnemonic8487
      @johnnymnemonic8487 6 лет назад

      It better be on DC

  • @210doc9
    @210doc9 6 лет назад +1

    I have used a car charger with a starting circuit to quickly zap small cell NiCads to get about the same success. You can keep the carcass of your dead soldier and replace the internal cells.

    • @frugalprepper
      @frugalprepper  6 лет назад +1

      I am actually using it right not to steal some of the good cells to fix a battery for a friend.

  • @Jason-iq2zu
    @Jason-iq2zu 6 лет назад +20

    I'm not saying it does or doesn't work but, you failed to show us that the battery you "fixed" was inoperable

    • @jimve6117
      @jimve6117 6 лет назад

      Jason k7

    • @stevenA44
      @stevenA44 6 лет назад +2

      I thought the same thing! LOL I doubt using a welder will fix a battery and in my opinion, it's dumb to even attempt this!!

    • @michajrsim
      @michajrsim 6 лет назад

      Jason I agree Jason.

    • @mranderson4194
      @mranderson4194 5 лет назад

      @@stevenA44 it works. I'm not sure you need so much power to do it though because i just use another fully charged battery. Works exactly the same.

    • @blakebarber5750
      @blakebarber5750 5 лет назад +1

      Terry C. Well I’d say dumb is speaking out on a public forum about a subject you clearly know nothing about...the welder isn’t the key it’s just a source of a reasonable electric shock ...this guy is absolutely right .this works almost every time and id also say that dumb is probably you standing in line to buy new batteries like a real tool of a consumer who loves throwing their money away and making some Chinese executive rich beyond imagination ....obviously you can’t trust every looser that decides to post a RUclips video but they guy told you he lost the footage showing the proof that the battery was dead...the welder is the most effective and recommended source of electric shock to correct dead battery syndrome ,but you can use another charged battery or a battery Charger ,or jump box ...laptop charger with a light bulb wired in line to reduce current ,but you go ahead and call it dumb and spend your money foolishly...I have done this myself by simply putting the battery in the charger and plugging and unplugging was rapidly to correct the issue

  • @CP-jc9lj
    @CP-jc9lj 6 лет назад

    I worked for Duracell for 5 years, one of my jobs was abuse testing batteries by applying overcharge, when a battery blows up CAUSTIC ELECTROLYTE and TOXIC CHEMICALS such as CADMIUM and Lead spray everywhere. The overcharge blows a hole in the thin dielectric insulator and suddenly SHORT CIRCUIT from Anode to Cathode. Don't do this with a welder and up close. Even if you wanted to try it, you'd do it outside, and attach to the battery first, then plug in the cable to the welder from far away, but even if it worked, you've weakened the dielectric and risk a short/fire appearing. And the whiskers are called DENDRITES. Especially with LITHIUM, any tampering, the risk of it catching fire in your garage when you're sleeping is high. . If you won't buy a new battery, -I'm very frugal...do it remotely with a variable power supply set only a few volts above original charger Voltage output for a short duration spiked connection, outside, and lock the battery up in a fire safe area when not in use and hope it doesn't short in your hand...IN the future with all your batteries, immediately remove your new battery from charge as close to 90-95 percent or immediately upon full charge indicator, and don't keep using once it gets low, keep it above 25 percent if possible. In the old days we battery guys claimed always 100 and 5 percent to avoid memory effect, but thats all changed and does not apply to lithium, a hybrid car battery works in a short mid range to make it last over 8 years

    • @heshumajid8899
      @heshumajid8899 5 лет назад

      Thanks for the useful advice. I will follow that when charging electronic devices including my smartphones. Cheers :-)

  • @careyfox538
    @careyfox538 6 лет назад +6

    Hey Frug, What else can you use besides a welder to get that power surge on the battery? Thanks.

    • @frugalprepper
      @frugalprepper  6 лет назад +3

      Anything around 24-30 or so volts should do it. Two car batteries hooked in series would do it.

    • @jpblitz2104
      @jpblitz2104 6 лет назад

      What about two wires directly connected to a 110v socket? Can this surge type be AC or it has to be only DC?

    • @heyyou5189
      @heyyou5189 6 лет назад +1

      JP Blitz Only DC

    • @jpblitz2104
      @jpblitz2104 6 лет назад +2

      Thank you hey you. Possible disaster avoided! :-)

    • @jpblitz2104
      @jpblitz2104 6 лет назад +7

      Craig, the video does not clarify what type of current needs to be applied. Hey you was kind enough to clarify, that is a good fellow human. You instead mock. Craig, you are the moron.

  • @clearmist1
    @clearmist1 4 года назад

    The chargers have a voltage reader in them because the batteries need to fall within a certain range to begin the charging process. If the battery is too low the charger cannot risk overcharging a foreign battery and risk causing a fire or explosion because the operator put in a battery not designed to be in the charger. So it will refuse to charge. What he is doing with the welder is putting just enough voltage in the battery to get it to the minimum charge voltage so the charger can recognize it as the correct battery type for the particular charger. You could do this a bit safer by using the same battery types so DeWalt to DeWalt one fully charged and the broken battery connecting positive to positive and negative to negative leads, in 20 to 30-second intervals until the broken one can be recognized by the charger.

    • @frugalprepper
      @frugalprepper  4 года назад

      It is true that there is a minimum voltage at which the charger will start to charge the battery. It is also current limited and it checks the internal resistance of the battery. It is true the voltage is low. It is true that I am bringing up the surface voltage when I shock it. It is also true that I am blowing the dendrites out between the anode and cathode in the cells which is what cause the voltage to get so low. See this document form NASA about the process: ntrs.nasa.gov/search.jsp?R=19850023073.

    • @clearmist1
      @clearmist1 4 года назад

      @@frugalprepper Shorting two batteries like my first comment suggests provides a lot of amperage too which is why you only do it for 20 to 30 seconds. This amperage could burn the dendrites as well

    • @frugalprepper
      @frugalprepper  4 года назад

      @@clearmist1 Absolutely if the voltage is low enough in the receiving battery the current will melt those suckers off!

  • @throttlebottle5906
    @throttlebottle5906 6 лет назад +3

    why not clamp some heavy gauge wire over the terminals and make all the sparks well away from the battery at the welder side or by bumping the AC power feeding the welder.
    no burnt battery terminals and you could place it under a heavy shield away form you, just in case.

    • @frugalprepper
      @frugalprepper  6 лет назад

      That clamps, shields, wire, extension cords. Sounds like a lot of work.

    • @lenywilliams7765
      @lenywilliams7765 6 лет назад +1

      FrugalPrepper's Garage & Garden. Depending on the brand, u'll save anywhere from $50 - to $100 ! Is that a lot of money ?

    • @bobmarshall3700
      @bobmarshall3700 6 лет назад

      With all the hamburgers and cigarettes, this big boy can stand any explosion...

    • @Camperman1951
      @Camperman1951 6 лет назад

      Don't be an ass.

    • @kyleirwin7845
      @kyleirwin7845 6 лет назад

      throttle bottle )

  • @andrewbodor4891
    @andrewbodor4891 8 месяцев назад

    Take good battery and place next to bad one. Take small alligator jumper cord (micro center) and jump left to left; right to right. Leave that way for 1 1/2 hours. You are placing a charge into bad battery. The charger needs to sense that there is a charge in the battery for the relay to turn on the charger. Take the "bad" battery and place it into the charger. It should now charge since the battery will be above the threshold where the electromagnetic relay will pull in the 110 volts to charge the battery.

  • @Blissterd1
    @Blissterd1 6 лет назад +4

    Most 110v stick welders put out AC current. Do you have a DC welder? You also said car batteries in series work and they are for sure at DC. I have used high voltage (around 90 v) electrolytic capacitors and discharged them into smaller nicads to de-whisker them but I have some Dewalt 18v batteries that need it and my capacitor trick won't work. Short of rectifying my welder I am short on knowing what to do.

    • @frugalprepper
      @frugalprepper  6 лет назад +1

      It doesn't matter if it is AC or DC as long as you get a jolt of voltage to blow the whiskers off the annode and cathode. If you have good 18V batteries you could hook two or three of them in series to blow the whiskers off of the bad one.

    • @bobbysolo5411
      @bobbysolo5411 6 лет назад

      Since every welder I have used is very adjustable, it would be nice to know the setting he was using, so we don't go hog wild and hit it with ten times the amount he used, with catastrophic effect.

    • @jimmytate7587
      @jimmytate7587 6 лет назад

      you might try checking the thermal fuse.

    • @sg-ei2ht
      @sg-ei2ht 6 лет назад

      Dude get to the point dam i just about does d off good idea but clean that garage out look some what profesinal

  • @ciarajones8848
    @ciarajones8848 Год назад

    It's kinda funny to me after scrolling all through these comments and seeing how many of you people are rude and judgemental and entitled. You're bitching about him not getting to the point like yt doesn't have the option to fast forward, but the stuff in the beginning is important and good information too and it helped me out alot. I have watched hours and hours worth of these videos on yt and there are plenty of quick to the point videos that don't explain the science or anything else for that matter. Go watch one of those and stfu! To the people complaining about his cigarette it's not your damn lungs so why do you care?!? The man made a helpful informative video and instead of being grateful for it y'all actually took time and energy out of your day to bitch and complain to this man like he's going to care, instead of just exiting the video and going on about your life if it wasn't for you. Wth is wrong with people these days

  • @jonjonson3985
    @jonjonson3985 6 лет назад +20

    Nickel cadmium batteries do not have or need microprocessors. The microprocessor is found in lithium ion battery packs to monitor and shut the discharge down at a given volt level. If you don't know something don't speculate. You're teaching people who don't know better a non truth. Be responsible with your words.And picking the battery pack up and dropping it repeatedly is annoying.Learn to get to the important subject matter faster. No one has time to waste because you want to blab for 5 mins and say nothing.

    • @frugalprepper
      @frugalprepper  6 лет назад +4

      Yes some Ni-Cad packs have circuitry in them for on battery Voltage Level Meters, Charging Voltage Signature Detection and Temperature detection. Thanks for the comment.

    • @my2bestgirls
      @my2bestgirls 6 лет назад +2

      Jon Jonson
      NONE of your Damn business!!

    • @ifthebeltiscrackedor
      @ifthebeltiscrackedor 6 лет назад +2

      That´s some serious negativity coming from you mister.. Why do you complain so much because someone is sharing something he do in his garage? Do you have a problem with that? Why are you on youtube and why do you look at clips you don´t like? Stop playing the victim. Take control of these feelings. If no one would have taken any trial and error risks in the past do you think we would be in the society we see today? There need to be different approaches. Peace man!

    • @sonyacisneros7015
      @sonyacisneros7015 6 лет назад +2

      Well said Ola K & Bruce Peck, I mean well written/typed. I’d hate for Jon Jonson to attempt to publicly humiliate me as well by ridiculing either my misuse of vocabulary or grammar... Jon, if you’re as versed in batteries as you claim to be then why watch informative videos explaining anything concerning batteries ???? I’m going to guess either because you’re not as “in the know” as you’d like everyone to believe & or you watch them in hopes that you catch some insignificant trivial mistake that you can rub their nose in. I can only imagine how sad and lonely you must be. Try not to speak to and or treat others in the same manner in your day to day life and I’m sure things will get better for you. Either way I truly appreciate the info I learned from watching this video. I’m sure that after I resurrect one or two batteries It’ll become like second nature to me (I hope). Thank you Frugal Prepper’s Garage & Garden!! Keep doing what you’re doing, which is helping us out with info that we’d otherwise have to pay for or just go without.

    • @teddahrable
      @teddahrable 5 лет назад

      Jon Jonson, I've watched people on RUclips present subjects in various formats. Some of them I like, others, not so much. If I watch something I think is wrong, because I consider myself a SME, I don't attack. I just don't watch their videos anymore or recommend them. It's difficult to criticize what someone is presenting when I don't have my own videos to back up my claims.
      Perhaps, that's way you should do. Grab a hundred different Ni-Cad tool batteries, tear them all apart on you video and PROVE TO THE WORLD that there's no circuitry or processors in them! Or, you could shut up and move on. Just sayin'.
      And, for the record, I have the same 24 hours in a day that you do, and I didn't mind the 6 minute preamble. Not everyone out there has studied this or taken these battery packs apart. You have a fast forward on your controls, or maybe you didn't know that since it would take previous time to find it and hit that button.

  • @JM-yx1lm
    @JM-yx1lm 4 года назад +2

    I bet this guy is cool to hang out with!! Flanging that ciggarette around explaining everything haha.

    • @frugalprepper
      @frugalprepper  4 года назад

      Thanks. I am a cool guy to hang out with!

  • @johnsonandson7772
    @johnsonandson7772 6 лет назад +3

    I think you've been on the charger for too long.. wiskers... get it...

  • @somerandomguy3868
    @somerandomguy3868 6 лет назад +2

    I knew when you started talking about satellite batteries you had some very specific expertise, this is a great technique, you can isolated the failed cell/cells in the pack on the ones this doesn't work on, great video

    • @thomaskelly296
      @thomaskelly296 4 года назад

      I've been doing this for quite a long time. I've done it with coin cells, alkaline cells, Ni-Cad cells, and zinc carbon cells. It seems to work best with Ni-Cad cells. I had a coin cell EXPLODE once. The danger is if you apply power for too long, the cells/battery will get HOT. If it gets hot enough inside the cells, the pressure inside the cell will get so high that they can EXPLODE.
      My Process:
      1) Try to charge.
      2) Measure individual cells voltage with DMM on dc range.
      3) Those that measure anything close to what they should (1.2 vdc for Ni-Cad cells) will likely take a charge.
      4) Those that are zero volts dc are most likely the "bad" cells.
      5) Next I measure the "bad" cells DMM on low ohms range.
      6) Most likely they will be shorted and measure close to zero ohms.
      7) I zap the shorted cells with a high current DC voltage close to the normal voltage of the cell. Be sure to connect observe correct polarity (plus to plus and minus to minus).
      8) Wait a bit before continuing (feel if cell is getting HOT). You do not want cells to EXPLODE.
      9) I repeat steps 2-8 until cell no longer measure zero volts across the cell.
      10 Go on to next cell.
      The best voltage source is a high current DC power supply that allows you to adjust the voltage and current limits for the output. Next best are variable low voltage welders and 6/12/24 volt car battery chargers.

  • @ericvickery6357
    @ericvickery6357 6 лет назад +68

    skip to 8:00 to avoid yah yah yah yah

    • @Lardster142
      @Lardster142 6 лет назад +2

      Eric Vickery
      Thanks man, nearly hit the back button

    • @tomfilla3618
      @tomfilla3618 6 лет назад +1

      Eric Vickery )’

    • @ericvickery6357
      @ericvickery6357 6 лет назад +4

      yea it was hard to watch without cringing and facepalming

    • @robertphillips2244
      @robertphillips2244 6 лет назад +1

      Robert

    • @Terry-xf5pt
      @Terry-xf5pt 6 лет назад +4

      Can this guy yack,takes forever to get to the point!!

  • @tomsawyer6228
    @tomsawyer6228 5 лет назад +1

    The best thing I found was a charger you can make it that turns your battery on and off for like 2 or 3 seconds at a time when it's completely dead and then it'll start taking a charge so you need some kind of a switched charger

    • @frugalprepper
      @frugalprepper  4 года назад

      Because when it turns off and on there is a rush of current that burns the wiskers off.

    • @dodsondodson3208
      @dodsondodson3208 4 года назад

      What about just unplugging & plugging it in? Would that work?

  • @TJSWOODWORKINGSHOP
    @TJSWOODWORKINGSHOP 6 лет назад +5

    Hey brother cool tip I have 12 they don't work, I good it now thank you sir for the trick nice later :)

  • @Chris-pj1os
    @Chris-pj1os 5 лет назад +2

    Thanks for posting. Any clue why my 18v batteries won't store more than 10v? and is there a hack to "wake up" the cells that may not be charging correctly? They are Dewalt 18v NiCd, 7 years old.

    • @frugalprepper
      @frugalprepper  4 года назад

      Sometimes you just have a bad cell or one that is in reversal. There isn't much you can do but tear it apart and measure the individual cells. Might make a good video. How to make a good battery out of two bad ones.

  • @saulgoodman9490
    @saulgoodman9490 6 лет назад +10

    Mate get off the smokes, it's hard but l did it using nicotine gum. Was on strongest for ages but now nicotine free. 2 years later my lungs are heaps better.

    • @frugalprepper
      @frugalprepper  6 лет назад +1

      Bacon is great for you.

    • @frugalprepper
      @frugalprepper  6 лет назад

      I learned it wasn't the bacon that was making me fat and lost 50lbs and I ma still loosing, and I can eat all the bacon I want.

    • @frugalprepper
      @frugalprepper  6 лет назад

      Nope it's my wife's garage technically.

    • @realaussiemale567
      @realaussiemale567 6 лет назад +1

      FrugalPrepper's Garage & Garden Bacon is good for u, in moderation, NOT large amounts everyday.

    • @frugalprepper
      @frugalprepper  6 лет назад +1

      Not in moderation. All you can eat.

  • @thumperman8490
    @thumperman8490 3 года назад

    They sometimes do take another charge, but then discourage overnight and do not hold power for a long time. Best to check them out internally and remove a defective cell or two. Need a spot welder to secure the new cells ...worth a punt as the new bars a

  • @hectorpascal
    @hectorpascal 5 лет назад +3

    I was skipping through your video and WTF'ed when I saw a lot of smoke. Had to skip back a bit to find you were just smoking a cigarette!

    • @kipdon
      @kipdon 5 лет назад

      ya, I so appreciate learning stuff from guys like this but OH MAN....some of these guys simply do TOO MUCH chit chat thru out there videos

    • @frugalprepper
      @frugalprepper  4 года назад

      Thanks for your feedback

  • @chrispetela8644
    @chrispetela8644 6 лет назад

    Nice little hustle

  • @KasraOskuie
    @KasraOskuie 6 лет назад +3

    For the love of God, get to the point!!! Thank you for the info. But, you lost me by 5th minute!

    • @frugalprepper
      @frugalprepper  6 лет назад +6

      Yes, Jesus Loves you. Your refund is on the way.

    • @marcoflores6325
      @marcoflores6325 4 года назад

      Ahh man I was cracking up the moment I read your reply to kasra

  • @sswiths5328
    @sswiths5328 4 года назад

    Mine worked, not right away, you have to leave it in the charger a little longer.. I had to leave them in 3 min to 5 min then they starting to charge.. I did not use the welder, I used wires from one good battery to the bad one, zap it a few times. Worked for me.

  • @ShyboyMike
    @ShyboyMike 6 лет назад +3

    i was going to try this but then i found another video that was supposedly originally from a kid,don't know his age but it was so simple to do cause i need to get a new torch for my mig welder.i even wondered if i could do it with a mig so i did this instead -with battery docked in charger switch or plug in and out repeatedly randomly,intermittently,whatever until you get it to accept a charge..sometimes a little patience too. i tried it on my milwaukee charger and battery and it didn't work..i tested the charger and it didn't work..hmmmm? how the hell did that happen? i take care of my stuff..nicads,nimh,and i think lithium too all go bad in extreme temps.seems to me that it ruins them..i keep certain test instruments in a cooler both during summer and winter in my workhorse, i think i need a bigger cooler now to accommodate for my batteries too but anyway his trick did the trick for my ryobi battery and charger.i couldn't believe that it worked.now i'll test it to see how long it holds a charge..thanks for your video anyway it does show it working like you said and i saw the proof.

  • @casdirico9532
    @casdirico9532 3 года назад

    This guy is some fucken mad scientist...dude your crazy !!!!!

  • @John-zt3lv
    @John-zt3lv 6 лет назад +3

    Is this the same process they sell online called "EZ battery reconditioning"

    • @frugalprepper
      @frugalprepper  6 лет назад

      jcweb I have no idea.

    • @edreynolds8063
      @edreynolds8063 6 лет назад +1

      Avoid that EZ bloke like the plague...pure marketing scandal. If their info is so great then why have they loaded up pages worth of propaganda on countless bogus websites so the legitimate ones are several pages down the search?
      They've perfected (technologically) the old techniques used in mail order before the internet...selling worthless information.
      The age old adage applies: if someone throws enough sh*t some of it will stick. Don't get caught in the crossfire!

    • @lenywilliams7765
      @lenywilliams7765 6 лет назад +2

      FrugalPrepper's Garage & Garden ... 4 a person that says things like "sounds like a lot of work" u just took the time 2 reply 2 something that u need not had to, & accomplish the same thing !!! Wtf, y answer at all ?

    • @my2bestgirls
      @my2bestgirls 6 лет назад

      Leny Williams
      NONE of your Damn business!!

  • @mflanagan1076
    @mflanagan1076 5 лет назад +2

    Super Mario shirt cool dude I think you know you're talking about I have the same problem with these batteries good job

    • @frugalprepper
      @frugalprepper  4 года назад

      One of these days I will get past world 8-4

  • @mikelisacarb
    @mikelisacarb 4 года назад

    To me, the introductory explanation was very helpful .... and necessary. Too many of us are working on false information about this issue.
    Still, for those of us who don't have a welding unit, it was disappointing to watch all that time and then find out that one was necessary in order to resurrect our batteries.

    • @frugalprepper
      @frugalprepper  4 года назад

      Anything that will put a quick surge of current will work. You can use a car battery charger or even another battery hooked up in parallel.

  • @davidmorgan9095
    @davidmorgan9095 4 года назад

    when I was in grade school many years ago, my teacher told us to announciate our words properly so all could hear our ideas..

    • @frugalprepper
      @frugalprepper  4 года назад +3

      Well great for you. I was born with a split uvula and a sub-mucus cleft palette and wen't through 14 years of speech therapy to talk as well as I do.

    • @zakorama
      @zakorama 4 года назад +6

      The word your looking for is 'enunciate'. If you are trying to prove you intelligence you should use the correct words.

  • @STBRetired1
    @STBRetired1 3 года назад

    I wonder - seems like I've read about some of these battery packs having a small thermistor inside as a heat or overload protection. Perhaps that one battery pack that wouldn't take a charge has blown out that thermistor. I believe that article said to open up the battery pack and cut out that thermistor and just join the two wires together. You won't have the protection but the battery pack may be usable again for a long time.

  • @wilzedens8676
    @wilzedens8676 4 года назад

    Would this Awesome trick work for Dewalt NiCad batteries as well?
    Also, Thank You for taking your valuable time to share this knowledge with us all!!

  • @fontesdeo8582
    @fontesdeo8582 5 лет назад +1

    Awesome information yet very painful to watch LOL. Thanks for sharing :)

    • @frugalprepper
      @frugalprepper  4 года назад

      Just take some Aspirin and it will be okay.

  • @mrgcav
    @mrgcav Год назад

    This is a sure way to blow the internal thermal fuse. You theory is correct but you method requires to do each cell one by one inside the pack at 2.5V @ 2.0Amps. Using a welder or car battery will at least ruin the battery life and possible risk of the cel exploding. You need to provide a gentle shock.

  • @mikecawood
    @mikecawood 5 лет назад

    Nicad batteries - that's ancient technology.

    • @NTurman
      @NTurman 5 лет назад

      It’s a main backup battery in large corporations. Lithium is great but has limitations

  • @MP-ef6mc
    @MP-ef6mc 4 года назад +1

    Super Mario, love the shirt

  • @lindabocardo6050
    @lindabocardo6050 9 месяцев назад

    What do I do if I don’t have a cable welder to charge like you did in the video

  • @hyrixproductions5498
    @hyrixproductions5498 3 года назад

    Hell yeah, I'm a Nintendo collector.

  • @blankblank5166
    @blankblank5166 3 года назад +1

    Can I blast'em with 110 out the wall socket, or I have 32v , and 12 v? I know you can't recommend anything and don't suggest anything but as a matter of science which method would hold the highest probability or or just none of those are probable I need to go with the welder,....

  • @joefrisbie1594
    @joefrisbie1594 5 лет назад +1

    love garage mechanics DIY

  • @rickcontreras59
    @rickcontreras59 6 лет назад +1

    Thank you for your time