Ok so I had two brand-new basically just hadn't been used in nine months Ryobi lithium 18-volt one batteries and both of them did not work I did exactly as you taught me on this video and I just hit it one time each one one-time real quick off of a battery that was fully charged and the charger started charging them right away thank you for this for your video
This worked great! Much better than other methods that require a power supply or another adapter. I didn't have a multimeter handy, so I made the connection and counted to 12. Did this 5 times and the battery was able to start charging. Thanks so much! Saved me $40! Cheers from America!
Well done. That is the best technique I have seen. I had previously got one of two batteries going again using a similar technique except I was using a car charger and may have cooked one of them. Using another ryobi battery is a much better idea.
Thanks, this worked for me. I only had one Ryobi battery but used a Dewalt 20V as my charging battery. I got my Ryobi to 14v and put in the in charger and it charged fine. Was also scared about a battery explosion, but everything worked out.
Thanks for the video same process with makita 18v but at least you don't have to take those apart. Ive got a Ryobi thets charged across the cells showing 18.5V but on the output less than 1V so the control board is stopping output. Any ideas to reset it ?
similar case here still hoping to fix it though, I have an old cordless drill machine ndci which i just coonverted to lithium battery arranged in series. , after building the pack, it wont charge.is it a must to add tp450 or BMS before it can charge?
Good recovery Karl, well done matey… ✅ Only thing I would mention to be very careful of, even with an apparently dead Lithium battery, is do ensure the bare cables, you are using to touch the good battery terminals, never touch together - you would almost certainly bugger your battery for certain (and potential get a somewhat larger spark than you did if there is some charge returning!)… ⚡️ 🔥 On a different tack - what is the nifty little Green toolkit you used… 🤷🏼♂️ 🐸
Cheers mate 👍. Yeah the wire I used was quite stiff so it held apart well. Good job really because of how many times I dropped it🤣. As for the little tool set I can't remember of hand what it is but it was just a cheap set I got from ebay or amazon. To be honest it's been a really useful set over the years so if I can find a link for it I will share it with you👍
I put mine in the freezer for a couple minutes and it started to charge. Awesome, cause I didn't want to fuck around with lithium batteries. Much easier fix, try this first
Very helpful thanks! But it’s the best final test to see how long it provides service under load? Perhaps intermittent? and steady use? and shelf time?
One suggestion for the sake of safety. Since it is possible that one or more cells in the depleted battery are totally dead (shorted), that could result in the other cells being put into an over voltage condition by jumping the battery in this manner. So the periodic voltage checks should take a measurement across each individual cell to be sure that they are all getting to similar voltage as they are getting recharged. The electronics in these batteries can normally see to that, but this jumping bypasses the electronics.
Do You Have Any Red & Black Jumper Wires To Jump That Battery With I Think Once You Get Atleast 7 Volts In It Put It Back Together Then Throw It On The Charger.
A 20V One+ Ryobi battery has to be at least 16V to charge in the charger. Supposedly the charging circuit will not let a battery with less voltage than 16 volts charge as there is danger with charging a low voltage battery: ie: a battery fire might occur quickly. Therefore you should keep the charging batteries in a safe non-flammable environment that will not catch fire if the battery begins to burn. Often you can raise a battery that isn't too far below the "safe" threshold by by moving it in and out of the charger so the red light stays on and the green flashes and measuring the voltage from time to time to make sure it's increasing. Eventually you will get the battery past the threshold and it will charge , if all the cells are good, to a voltage near enough to the operating voltage, and you don't have to take the battery apart to raise the voltage this way! Always protect your eyes when working with these batteries, in case one explodes.
Gonna try this on my dead 5ah battery. Only have 9ah battery available to jumpstart the 5ah, wouldn't think that matters too much or? And I dont have a voltmeter, but I recon a "couple" of jumps from alive to dead will do it? Will take them outside since its sunny here today, hopefully I will not explode 😂 Cheers 👍
I did that on one battery and it worked a treat. Back to full performance. A miracle fix. But I have another where the charge light shows green but I cant get any output. Any suggestions?
I have a DeWalt 5 amp hr 20V battery that would not charge and I put it in a different charger which charged it right away.I have 12 of those batteries and only one tricky to charge.It is nearly 9 years old. CHEERS from HERE! P.S. Try not to run below one bar before charging up.
Yeah I've got a few different chargers and it did the same on all of them. I always take my batteries off the tools after use but this 1 got left on a tool I lent out and forgot about for probably 12 months so it just totally drained. Glad I managed to bring it back to life though 👍
Ok so I had two brand-new basically just hadn't been used in nine months Ryobi lithium 18-volt one batteries and both of them did not work I did exactly as you taught me on this video and I just hit it one time each one one-time real quick off of a battery that was fully charged and the charger started charging them right away thank you for this for your video
Excellent. Happy to here it worked for you👍
This worked great! Much better than other methods that require a power supply or another adapter. I didn't have a multimeter handy, so I made the connection and counted to 12. Did this 5 times and the battery was able to start charging. Thanks so much! Saved me $40! Cheers from America!
Glad to here it worked for you 👍
Great trick. Revived my 18v Ryobi battery. No multimeter, just held wires against warming battery few times a bit longer and it did the trick. 👍
Well done. That is the best technique I have seen. I had previously got one of two batteries going again using a similar technique except I was using a car charger and may have cooked one of them. Using another ryobi battery is a much better idea.
Hey, I bought a faulty new 4Ah for £6, did this fix and it works as well as a £70 new battery!!
Thank you brother...I'll give it a go this evening before heading out to Home Depot for a spare!!!
Hope it works for you pal👍
@@TheYorkshireMix worked like a champ!!! thanks so much!
@@nickchryssikos6897 happy to hear that mate. Glad you found the video helpful 👍
Thanks, this worked for me. I only had one Ryobi battery but used a Dewalt 20V as my charging battery. I got my Ryobi to 14v and put in the in charger and it charged fine. Was also scared about a battery explosion, but everything worked out.
Happy to hear it worked out for you pal👍
Loved your video!! You are hilarious and got the job done.
Cheers 👍 I'm glad you enjoyed the video 😃
You are the best. Worked like a charm. I'll be forever grateful. Thanks, man.
Happy to hear it worked for you 👍
Thanks for the video same process with makita 18v but at least you don't have to take those apart. Ive got a Ryobi thets charged across the cells showing 18.5V but on the output less than 1V so the control board is stopping output. Any ideas to reset it ?
similar case here still hoping to fix it though, I have an old cordless drill machine ndci which i just coonverted to lithium battery arranged in series. , after building the pack, it wont charge.is it a must to add tp450 or BMS before it can charge?
Good recovery Karl, well done matey… ✅
Only thing I would mention to be very careful of, even with an apparently dead Lithium battery, is do ensure the bare cables, you are using to touch the good battery terminals, never touch together - you would almost certainly bugger your battery for certain (and potential get a somewhat larger spark than you did if there is some charge returning!)… ⚡️ 🔥
On a different tack - what is the nifty little Green toolkit you used… 🤷🏼♂️ 🐸
Cheers mate 👍. Yeah the wire I used was quite stiff so it held apart well. Good job really because of how many times I dropped it🤣. As for the little tool set I can't remember of hand what it is but it was just a cheap set I got from ebay or amazon. To be honest it's been a really useful set over the years so if I can find a link for it I will share it with you👍
Well done brother
I put mine in the freezer for a couple minutes and it started to charge. Awesome, cause I didn't want to fuck around with lithium batteries. Much easier fix, try this first
Thanks
Cheers pal I really appreciate it 👍
Thank you. You have me the confidence to try it myself. Saved me a few £ in a new one
@@chrisburns75 glad it worked for you👍
Very helpful thanks! But it’s the best final test to see how long it provides service under load? Perhaps intermittent? and steady use? and shelf time?
Been using it like I use all my batteries and it's been working as it should since I fixed it. Its no different to my other batteries now👍
@@TheYorkshireMix ok-we’ll I’ve got 5 of’em I’ll give it a try-thank you again for the tutorial!
@@logangarrett2550 no problem. Hope it works for you👍
"I'm in the pub in the garden" Bloody show off! :D
🤣 it's currently a pub with no alcohol so I need to change that lol👍
One suggestion for the sake of safety. Since it is possible that one or more cells in the depleted battery are totally dead (shorted), that could result in the other cells being put into an over voltage condition by jumping the battery in this manner. So the periodic voltage checks should take a measurement across each individual cell to be sure that they are all getting to similar voltage as they are getting recharged. The electronics in these batteries can normally see to that, but this jumping bypasses the electronics.
Do You Have Any Red & Black Jumper Wires To Jump That Battery
With I Think Once You Get Atleast 7 Volts In It Put It Back Together
Then Throw It On The Charger.
A 20V One+ Ryobi battery has to be at least 16V to charge in the charger. Supposedly the charging circuit will not let a battery with less voltage than 16 volts charge as there is danger with charging a low voltage battery: ie: a battery fire might occur quickly. Therefore you should keep the charging batteries in a safe non-flammable environment that will not catch fire if the battery begins to burn. Often you can raise a battery that isn't too far below the "safe" threshold by by moving it in and out of the charger so the red light stays on and the green flashes and measuring the voltage from time to time to make sure it's increasing. Eventually you will get the battery past the threshold and it will charge , if all the cells are good, to a voltage near enough to the operating voltage, and you don't have to take the battery apart to raise the voltage this way! Always protect your eyes when working with these batteries, in case one explodes.
Gonna try this on my dead 5ah battery. Only have 9ah battery available to jumpstart the 5ah, wouldn't think that matters too much or? And I dont have a voltmeter, but I recon a "couple" of jumps from alive to dead will do it? Will take them outside since its sunny here today, hopefully I will not explode 😂 Cheers 👍
Yeah it should hopefully work. Worth a try anyway 👍
Very good thanks
I did that on one battery and it worked a treat. Back to full performance. A miracle fix. But I have another where the charge light shows green but I cant get any output. Any suggestions?
Curious how many more cycles have you got out of the ‘revived’ battery?
It's still working just like my other batteries. No problems with it at all since the fix👍
I wonder if the battery is still good or how long it lasted?
The battery is still working as good as any of my other batteries. Never had a problem with it since 👍
So what do you do if the voltage on the actual batteries is 18v but the post for the tool reads .1 after a couple of seconds?
Thanks!
Good job. Thank you. In case you haven't heard you have a bit of an accent 😅
How about temperature delay? I did this trick but stuck on orange charging.
I have a DeWalt 5 amp hr 20V battery that would not charge and I put it in a different charger which charged it right away.I have 12 of those batteries and only one tricky to charge.It is nearly 9 years old. CHEERS from HERE! P.S. Try not to run below one bar before charging up.
Yeah I've got a few different chargers and it did the same on all of them. I always take my batteries off the tools after use but this 1 got left on a tool I lent out and forgot about for probably 12 months so it just totally drained. Glad I managed to bring it back to life though 👍
Does this mean that if my battery is not completely dead this method wouldn't work
No the battery can still have some power in it but it might not be enough for the charger to recognise. Worth trying it anyway 👍
You know batteries, Jon Snow
Your video is good, but you talk funny.
🤣 that will be the Yorkshire accent 👍
move the bloody set of screwdrivers somewhere else so you can have more room to work, Be organised.