Faulty DeWalt Battery charger for power tools

In summary, the conversation is about a person who has had to replace their DeWalt tool chargers multiple times and is now experiencing issues with them. They suspect that exposure to mist may have caused the chargers to fail. Suggestions are given for checking the voltage output and potential corrosion or damage inside the charger. The person is hesitant to ask their neighbor for help and is considering buying a new charger. The conversation also touches on the possibility of a fuse tripping and the need to use a voltmeter to check the chargers.
  • #1
DaveC426913
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I've replaced the charger for my DeWalt tools several times, and now I may have to go out and get a fourth one.

One of them flashes a fault warning (steady slow flash), the other two do not light up at all.

Now, I do not take care of my tools. All three of these chargers may have been exposed to a light spray from rain getting into the slot where the terminals are (the chargers are protected, but wind carries mist). The terminals are not rusted; they look shiny.

The charging slot has a "drain" hole in the bottom, and the terminals are raised above the bottom, almost as if it's designed to prevent water from getting at the terminals.

I'm using the battery, so it's not entirely dead.

I find it hard to believe that a relatively simple device (it's just a transformer) could fail so easily.

Can anyone suggest some checks I might do to see if anyone of these chargers can be resuscitated?
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  • #2
One question Dave, have you tried the "charged" batteries with more than one tool? I assume you have but had to ask.
 
  • #3
I only have the one tool. I've been using my drill for the last week on the same charge, but it finally ran down (not all the way).
I've tried charging it with all three chargers and I get a little action out of it, but it's not actually charging.

So I don't think the drill is the problem. It is behaving fine.
 
  • #4
I'll bet one of your neighbors has a Dewalt charger. See if they can charge one of your batteries.
 
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  • #5
anorlunda said:
I'll bet one of your neighbors has a Dewalt charger. See if they can charge one of your batteries.
Ugh. The thought of asking my crazy neighbor for anything...

But seriously, I'm pretty certain the batteries are fine. I've been using them for a year with no trouble - until the charger gets a little misty.
 
  • #6
DaveC426913 said:
Now, I do not take care of my tools. All three of these chargers may have been exposed to a light spray from rain getting into the slot where the terminals are (the chargers are protected, but wind carries mist). The terminals are not rusted; they look shiny.
If moisture was able to get into where the terminals are, maybe it could also get into the guts of the charger, and corrode some of the connections or components inside. It might be useful to connect a voltmeter to the thing and see what voltage it's putting out. If the charger isn't working correctly, I would see what things look like inside.
Also, I wouldn't leave it anywhere it could get wet.
 
  • #7
Mark makes a good point. Can you take it apart and check for moisture-related corrosion/damage or it it one of those things where the instruction manual says something like "this excellent device can only be broken into by a qualified special person with a three-pronged framis, which if you have one do not use it or the device will probably explode and kill your entire family, including the goats" ?
 
  • #8
DaveC426913 said:
I'm using the battery, so it's not entirely dead.
DaveC426913 said:
But seriously, I'm pretty certain the batteries are fine.
Singular or plural? Both of my batteries slowly died over the years, so I bought new ones from Amazon recently and all is good now. My battery charger has never been left out in the rain, though...

Maybe borrow a compatible battery from your crazy neighbor to see if it works more normally in your charger(s)?
 
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  • #9
Mark44 said:
If moisture was able to get into where the terminals are, maybe it could also get into the guts of the charger, and corrode some of the connections or components inside. It might be useful to connect a voltmeter to the thing and see what voltage it's putting out. If the charger isn't working correctly, I would see what things look like inside.
I will have to. But I swear it's not that bad.

Mark44 said:
Also, I wouldn't leave it anywhere it could get wet.
That's crazy talk.

berkeman said:
Singular or plural? Both of my batteries slowly died over the years, so I bought new ones from Amazon recently and all is good now. My battery charger has never been left out in the rain, though...

Maybe borrow a compatible battery from your crazy neighbor to see if it works more normally in your charger(s)?
I already have some newer(ish) batteries. That's what I've been using. But I'll try that to rule out one factor.So the gist that I'm getting is that there isn't some 'I got wet!' fuse in these things.
 
  • #10
DaveC426913 said:
So the gist that I'm getting is that there isn't some 'I got wet!' fuse in these things.
Well, no. They weren't designed to work underwater...
 
  • #11
DaveC426913 said:
Can anyone suggest some checks I might do to see if anyone of these chargers can be resuscitated?
The best is to check whether the output terminals are giving the proper voltage, with a multimeter or voltmeter.

If you get no reading (0 V), then a fuse has perhaps tripped. Otherwise you have to check each and every component to see if they are working.
 
  • #12
Aww, come on. Google finds over 400 000 'dewalt charger schematic' (they make a LOT of different ones!) 'dewalt charger service manual' finds 1 970 000 hits.

The label in your photo shows that one is good for a wide range of different batteries; which probably means it has a rather smart IC in it that also senses what battery is inserted.

That said, first step is substitute the charger, then substitute the battery. (cuts the search universe in half. 😁)
 
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  • #13
Wrichik Basu said:
The best is to check whether the output terminals are giving the proper voltage, with a multimeter or voltmeter.

If you get no reading (0 V), then a fuse has perhaps tripped. Otherwise you have to check each and every component to see if they are working.
I'm not all that familiar with charger circuits, but I don't know if a no-load voltage check will work. It may be that the charger needs to sense a battery before it applies a charging voltage. I think that my 12V lead-acid battery charger (small one for motorcycles) behaves like that.
 
  • #14
DeWalt is a quality product. Have you considered their customer service. You could recite you sorry history with multiple chargers. You might get tips from them, or you might get a free charger.
 
  • #15
He might want to leave out the "underwater" part though... 😉
 
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  • #16
berkeman said:
I'm not all that familiar with charger circuits, but I don't know if a no-load voltage check will work. It may be that the charger needs to sense a battery before it applies a charging voltage. I think that my 12V lead-acid battery charger (small one for motorcycles) behaves like that.
what he said (very small).jpg
 
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  • #17
berkeman said:
I'm not all that familiar with charger circuits, but I don't know if a no-load voltage check will work. It may be that the charger needs to sense a battery before it applies a charging voltage. I think that my 12V lead-acid battery charger (small one for motorcycles) behaves like that.
Many chargers behave like that. Trickle chargers for vehicle batteries are examples, as you have said.

But I don't think it would be difficult to connect the battery to the charger via two words wires, such that the charger terminals are still accessible by the probes. Once the charger senses the battery, the multimeter can be used.

If the battery is in good condition, but the charger cannot sense it, then there can be a chance that the sensing circuit is faulty.

Edit: fixed typo.
 
  • #18
Wrichik Basu said:
But I don't think it would be difficult to connect the battery to the charger via two words ...
So, would these be cuss-words or what? :smile:
 
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  • #19
phinds said:
So, would these be cuss-words or what? :smile:
Typo, wires.
 
  • #20
NiCd? Maybe time to jump on the Li-ion band wagon. NiCd and NiMH base power tools never really lived up to the "power" part, always found them lacking and very short lived in terms of charge so never bother with cordless. Then I tried a friends Milwaukee M18Fuel tools, was quite impressed and been replacing all my corded tools with Dewalt XR brushless, nothing wrong with the red, I'm just a little OCD in that respect, so already having some black and yellow, couldn't go change color scheme now!

Difference between NiCd tools of yesterday and the Li-ion+brushless is night and day, the brushless recip I have gives my corded one a solid run for its money.
 
  • #21
berkeman said:
I'm not all that familiar with charger circuits, but I don't know if a no-load voltage check will work. It may be that the charger needs to sense a battery before it applies a charging voltage. I think that my 12V lead-acid battery charger (small one for motorcycles) behaves like that.
They do work like that. I watched a DIY video of a DeWalt charger not charging an extremely dead battery and it did exactly that. His trick was to give the dead battery a goose from another battery. Just enough so the charger could sense it.

anorlunda said:
DeWalt is a quality product. Have you considered their customer service. You could recite you sorry history with multiple chargers. You might get tips from them, or you might get a free charger.
Alas, that would be pretty dishonest. There isn't really a slippery slope here, where I could blame it on something else and simply neglect to mention the water exposure. I'd have to outright lie.
 
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  • #22
You don't have to lie to ask questions. They should have better answers than PF.
 
  • #23
anorlunda said:
You don't have to lie to ask questions. They should have better answers than PF.
Sure, but the first question they're going to ask is: Are you storing them properly and keeping them dry?
And I'll have to say "Well..."
And then they'll say "Great. Anything else we can help you with today?"

That's what I mean by no slippery slope. There's really nothing to ask that doesn't immediately provoke the obvious question.
 
  • #24
DaveC426913 said:
Sure, but the first question they're going to ask is: Are you storing them properly and keeping them dry?
And I'll have to say "Well..."
And then they'll say "Great. Anything else we can help you with today?"

That's what I mean by no slippery slope. There's really nothing to ask that doesn't immediately provoke the obvious question.
Yeah, but that doesn't mean they won't have an answer (possibly preceded by, "Well, you're not supposed to DO that").
 
  • #25
DaveC426913 said:
Alas, that would be pretty dishonest. There isn't really a slippery slope here, where I could blame it on something else and simply neglect to mention the water exposure. I'd have to outright lie.
You don't have to lie. You can tell them, "Yes, it got wet. But can you tell me how I can repair it now?"

If you open the charger, a close look will tell you if the water has had bad effects - corrosion. If you can confirm that none of the components/soldering is corroded, you can surely ask the customer service how you can repair it.
 
  • #26
Wrichik Basu said:
You don't have to lie. You can tell them, "Yes, it got wet. But can you tell me how I can repair it now?"

If you open the charger, a close look will tell you if the water has had bad effects - corrosion. If you can confirm that none of the components/soldering is corroded, you can surely ask the customer service how you can repair it.
Not that I want to beat this to death, but I know how this must go:

"There are no user serviceable parts inside. We strongly recommend that you do not open the case, as fire, serious injury or death may occur."

They can't say anything else. If they were to offer even the slightest suggestion of how one might fix something inside a closed electrical device, they would be opening themselves up to legal liability.
 
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  • #27
Wrichik Basu said:
If you can confirm that none of the components/soldering is corroded, you can surely ask the customer service how you can repair it.
That's not usually how Customer Service for appliances works, at least not in my experience. Usually you are asked to take it to an Authorized Repair Center (where they will tell you that it would just be cheaper to buy a new one in this case).

I used to service a lot of friends' TVs for free using SAM'S Photofacts schematics/repair manuals. It was great practice and experience, and it saved my friends a fair bit of money. Unfortunately, TV manufacturers and other appliance makers generally do not publish schematics and repair manuals any longer for the general public. It works better for them to only make those available to their "Authorized Service Centers"...
 
  • #28
Epilogue:

I wimped out. I happened to be at the store, so I just bought a new one.

I will be handing in my Man Card by end-of-day.

The sad news is: looking at how the new one is behaving is making me suspect that one of the originals was/is actually working fine. So now I have two.
 
  • #29
DaveC426913 said:
so I just bought a new one.
Makita sells chargers with every tool; try keeping them sorted one from another (voltage-wise) just with the screwdrivers/drills. In principle they're all "keyed" differently to avoid battery explosions and fires, but ...
 
  • #30
Bystander said:
Makita sells chargers with every tool; try keeping them sorted one from another (voltage-wise) just with the screwdrivers/drills. In principle they're all "keyed" differently to avoid battery explosions and fires, but ...
Sorry, I don't understand. All my chargers are 18V and DeWalt.

(Which won't last long since DeWalt is now pushing their 20V system.)
 
  • #31
DaveC426913 said:
There are no user serviceable parts inside.
Is a reliable indicator that there IS a fuse inside! Often soldered in.

Every one I've opened with that message had a fuse. Most WITHOUT that message did not have a fuse.

Cheers,
Tom
 
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  • #32
DaveC426913 said:
Not that I want to beat this to death, but I know how this must go:

"There are no user serviceable parts inside. We strongly recommend that you do not open the case, as fire, serious injury or death may occur."

They can't say anything else. If they were to offer even the slightest suggestion of how one might fix something inside a closed electrical device, they would be opening themselves up to legal liability.
I bet @Wrichik Basu comes from a country where lawyers haven’t ruined everything yet. I’m still waiting for a card or wristband I can carry that shows I’ve waived any right to this nebulous ‘liability’ idea and do not need to be treated like an unskilled child by technical departments. There is a strong ‘right to repair’ movement over here, and the backlash against WEE is mounting. Hopefully soon we’ll have more serviceable (modular?) devices and perhaps even repair shops again.

*rant over*

As per @Tom.G , most things with a switch-mode supply have either a fuse or equivalent, such as a fusible resistor. The latter seem susceptible to degrading over time due to heat cycles and break the rule that fuses don’t blow for no reason.
 
  • #33
Guineafowl said:
... There is a strong ‘right to repair’ movement over here, and the backlash against WEE is mounting. Hopefully soon we’ll have more serviceable (modular?) devices and perhaps even repair shops again.

*rant over*
What is "WEE"?

I certianly agree that more products should be serviceable/modular where possible. I wish the Environmental groups would get on this. I try to repair most things, not always possible or worth it, but most people just throw them out.

I understand if size/weight is critical, that a non-replaceable battery might be needed, but if not, then make it replaceable, please!
 
  • #34
NTL2009 said:
I certianly agree that more products should be serviceable/modular where possible. I wish the Environmental groups would get on this. I try to repair most things, not always possible or worth it, but most people just throw them out.

I understand if size/weight is critical, that a non-replaceable battery might be needed, but if not, then make it replaceable, please!
Companies want you to either call them directly for servicing, or throw away the product as a whole. I have often been asked to completely get a new UPS, while the only thing malfunctioning in it was the battery.
 
  • #35
NTL2009 said:
What is "WEE"?
Waste electrical/electronic equipment. Often a whole device thrown away because of a cracked solder joint, because of lead-free solder (RoHS) regs.
 
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<h2>1. What are the signs of a faulty DeWalt battery charger for power tools?</h2><p>The most common signs of a faulty DeWalt battery charger for power tools include a flashing red light, a lack of charging when plugged in, and a fully charged battery that quickly loses its charge.</p><h2>2. How can I troubleshoot a faulty DeWalt battery charger for power tools?</h2><p>First, check the power source to ensure it is functioning properly. Then, try using the charger on a different battery to see if the issue is with the charger or the battery. If the charger is still not working, it may need to be replaced.</p><h2>3. Can a faulty DeWalt battery charger damage my power tools?</h2><p>In most cases, a faulty DeWalt battery charger will not cause damage to your power tools. However, if the charger is constantly overcharging or undercharging the battery, it could potentially shorten the lifespan of the battery.</p><h2>4. Is it safe to continue using a faulty DeWalt battery charger?</h2><p>No, it is not safe to continue using a faulty DeWalt battery charger. It can potentially cause damage to your power tools and may also pose a safety hazard. It is best to replace the charger as soon as possible.</p><h2>5. How can I prevent my DeWalt battery charger from becoming faulty?</h2><p>To prevent your DeWalt battery charger from becoming faulty, make sure to properly maintain it by keeping it clean and storing it in a dry, cool place. Also, avoid overcharging or undercharging the battery, as this can cause damage to the charger. If you notice any signs of a faulty charger, replace it immediately.</p>

1. What are the signs of a faulty DeWalt battery charger for power tools?

The most common signs of a faulty DeWalt battery charger for power tools include a flashing red light, a lack of charging when plugged in, and a fully charged battery that quickly loses its charge.

2. How can I troubleshoot a faulty DeWalt battery charger for power tools?

First, check the power source to ensure it is functioning properly. Then, try using the charger on a different battery to see if the issue is with the charger or the battery. If the charger is still not working, it may need to be replaced.

3. Can a faulty DeWalt battery charger damage my power tools?

In most cases, a faulty DeWalt battery charger will not cause damage to your power tools. However, if the charger is constantly overcharging or undercharging the battery, it could potentially shorten the lifespan of the battery.

4. Is it safe to continue using a faulty DeWalt battery charger?

No, it is not safe to continue using a faulty DeWalt battery charger. It can potentially cause damage to your power tools and may also pose a safety hazard. It is best to replace the charger as soon as possible.

5. How can I prevent my DeWalt battery charger from becoming faulty?

To prevent your DeWalt battery charger from becoming faulty, make sure to properly maintain it by keeping it clean and storing it in a dry, cool place. Also, avoid overcharging or undercharging the battery, as this can cause damage to the charger. If you notice any signs of a faulty charger, replace it immediately.

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