Be careful the USB lithium don't have voltage protection. They are too small to fit proper voltage protection like the 18V line. The charge and the usb-c port have protection but the discharge terminals do not.
@@FTMOG713 I think they might have miss understood. Trust me the USB Lithium does not have that protection built in. It was moved tool side to be more cost effective. Give it a test, you can discharge the packs down all the way to 0V ( I recommend stopping before 1V though). Sorry, it would be nice if that worked.
@@FTMOG713 right now I’m looking for an adapter so I can either use a ryobi or a Milwaukee battery in my girlfriends kids power wheel. But I like the idea of building remote control cars and planes that run off that usb battery
@@FTMOG713 I’m still new at this can you write detailed-ish instructions or even a video detailing the build process. I am sure it’s stupid simple but I overthink things sometimes.
finally someone does something about the ryobi usb lithiums. i have a bunch as well, great for around the house tools lol
Just use lipos. It's a lot easier than using tool batteries and it's cheaper.
Be careful the USB lithium don't have voltage protection. They are too small to fit proper voltage protection like the 18V line. The charge and the usb-c port have protection but the discharge terminals do not.
@@Giant21120 when I asked Ryobi a while back, they said they did
@@FTMOG713 I think they might have miss understood. Trust me the USB Lithium does not have that protection built in. It was moved tool side to be more cost effective. Give it a test, you can discharge the packs down all the way to 0V ( I recommend stopping before 1V though). Sorry, it would be nice if that worked.
@@Giant21120 I will test one. Either way single cell LVP are really small wouldn’t take much to integrate one into the housing
do you have the 3D print file for the Ryobi 4v battery holder
Genius!
STL for dispenser? :D
@@kjetilpp I still haven’t found a low-voltage protection circuit to go into it
@ ah. But can you share it as is? 😀
Where can I download the stl files for your adapter?
@@DerkSpringer I don’t have it posted anywhere yet. What are your requirements?
@@FTMOG713 right now I’m looking for an adapter so I can either use a ryobi or a Milwaukee battery in my girlfriends kids power wheel. But I like the idea of building remote control cars and planes that run off that usb battery
@@DerkSpringer OK so you just need the adapter and the cap. I’ll try to post it to my CULT3d in a few days.
@@FTMOG713 I’m still new at this can you write detailed-ish instructions or even a video detailing the build process. I am sure it’s stupid simple but I overthink things sometimes.
@@DerkSpringer I’ll make a video