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- Dec 25, 2011
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My money's on that bfo trannie in the middle, looks a bit crispy.
having looked at it there does appear to be a crispy coating more so at one end than the other.My money's on that bfo trannie in the middle, looks a bit crispy.
having looked at it there does appear to be a crispy coating more so at one end than the other.
goosed or worth repairing? Can you even get that transformer?
You have more chance of a lottery win in my opinion.Can you even get that transformer?
@Onoff
Right, had a look at this a bit more, the third connection on the battery seems to retain its voltage even when the battery is too flat for a makita tool to run, even though some people report it disappearing after running a tool till the battery is flat, so perhaps it is only a +ve temperature output. With that in mind we really should at least try and protect the batteries from being discharged too much, as this is bad for Li-ion batteries.
Came up with the following, which through a quick trial appears to have a reasonable approximation, connected it up, ran the heat gun untill it went off, now it does allow you to release the trigger and start it again, but it wont go for more than a few seconds before turning off again. Took the battery in this state and put it in the makita impact driver and after winding a scew in and out on my bench a few times, I picked up a 4" bit of scrap and a long screw and it impacted it in about 2" before it stopped, so it seems to cut off a tiny bit in advance of what a makita tool would which is about what we want.
It is very simplistic and based a bit on trial and error, and I wouldn't say its perfect. but hopefully it should help stop batteries being accidentally over discharged
R1 and R2 form a voltage divider and the volt drop across both is equal to the battery voltage, the volt drop across R2 is 1/23rd of the total (the remainder being across R1). That means that if the battery is at 18v, the voltage at the mid point is 18/23=0.78v above negative which allows the transistor to turn on, when the voltage is less than 0.6v it will turn off, that equates to a battery voltage of 0.6*23=13.8v. The battery voltage does sag under loead due to its internal resistance, so the sensed voltage does drop below the 0.6v mark, meaning the tool turns off, the voltage then goes back up to above it, meaning it will turn on briefly again if trigger is released and re-pressed and will run for a few seconds before doing the same again
View attachment 11377
Di you mean the yellow one or the bent plated ones?Just need to find a source for these contacts. I searched for: female, double leaf, spring, breadboard, receptacle, contacts etc and all combinations. No luck.
Di you mean the yellow one or the bent plated ones?
just a thought Onoff, could you make an adapter for Makita to Milwaukee battery? I could then use it in my radio? I don’t mind chucking you some dollar.
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