DeWalt Lithium Ion and Flexvolt Battery charger comparison and compatibility

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  • čas přidán 31. 12. 2016
  • Showing battery type compatibility for common Dewalt Lithium Ion power tool battery chargers that come with the power tool package kits. Dewalt DCB112, Dewalt DCB101, Dewalt DCB118
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Komentáře • 83

  • @RebbeccaMr
    @RebbeccaMr Před rokem +259

    I feel grateful this reconditioning program czcams.com/users/postUgkxcJ22tnHH9l1vjdIdEIG27iOG55P7LXI8 was started. I had Three dead batteries scheduled for disposing of. Having said that, I tried out reconditioning them and it took me only an hour to do it! It doesn`t matter what type of battery you want, the process works.

  • @Homepros888
    @Homepros888 Před 6 lety +7

    Good explanation to people who don't know about chargers and battery, funny how you mention about the 8 amp charger with moving parts and keep away from saw dust while you have the chargers and battery on a piece of wood cover with saw dust.

  • @leslieguthrie6943
    @leslieguthrie6943 Před 3 lety +3

    I looked around for quite some time looking for this information. Well done sir, and thank you.

  • @DavidReason-ko5kx
    @DavidReason-ko5kx Před 11 měsíci +180

    My partner has a lot of tools, so when he needed a circular saw, I ordered this one for him as a Christmas gift. czcams.com/users/postUgkxYDKeIjKLOfcwTgdin7TtCutsz4MbIc43 He is incredibly happy with the purchase. He stated that he likes that it is powerful, but still easy to use and cuts very well. He mentioned that it is important to know the right tools for the job at hand, and this compact saw has been exactly what he needed for a variety of projects at his rental properties and renovations. He also appreciates the battery packs, as stated, he owns a lot of DEWALT tools, so he is able to always keep batteries charged as needed.

  • @78cobra
    @78cobra Před 6 lety +8

    Thank you foe the video. This is the exact answers to what my questions about the flex volt battery I had.

  • @gwyffels
    @gwyffels Před 6 lety +1

    Thanks. That helps explain what I was looking for.

  • @CobraFast1
    @CobraFast1 Před 6 lety

    Thank you. Great explanation of the difference. You answered all my questions. Great job. Thanks.

  • @jamesfair9751
    @jamesfair9751 Před 4 lety +4

    Wish I had a dcb112 charger. Both my 20 volt sets came with the fast 4 amp chargers a 101 and 115 and the flexvolt of course came with the fan cooled fast charger 8.0 amp. I much rather charge my batteries as slow as possible to get the most out of their lifetimes

  • @wyatt3750
    @wyatt3750 Před 4 lety +2

    Thanks Dr. Phil

  • @Copperkidsolo
    @Copperkidsolo Před 3 lety +1

    thanks for all that info man. got a question though. can that 8amp charger charges my 9amp flex battery?

  • @2010stoof
    @2010stoof Před 6 lety +3

    So my dcb112(2A output) and dxb115 (4A output) that I got with my drill impact combo (dcb112) and my large 996 drill with 5ah (the dcb115) will charge all three 12,20,60flex. But the yellow can only charge high capacity 20 and flexvolts.
    I hope I understood that correctly

  • @showstopper7562
    @showstopper7562 Před 7 lety

    best videos ever thankz

  • @costantineyoussif6679
    @costantineyoussif6679 Před 2 lety

    Which starter kit would you recommend for my dewalt tire inflator the starter kit with the 115dcb 2ah charger or the starter with the 101dcb 4ah charger ? Thanks again for your helpful video

  • @TheBirdandEagle
    @TheBirdandEagle Před 5 lety

    Great information. Thank you.

  • @tobyroels2151
    @tobyroels2151 Před 6 lety

    Great video!

  • @ivankorunovic5677
    @ivankorunovic5677 Před 4 lety

    Dear,
    what happens if the battery holds the current but when put on the charger the light does not light. whether they are bad connectors or something

  • @danielcole5204
    @danielcole5204 Před 9 měsíci

    You answered my question sir I was wondering how they where charging a 60 volt battery with a 20 volt charger lol

  • @justice4all997
    @justice4all997 Před 2 lety

    Thanks. I watch you alot
    Question- i have a dcb246ck battery starter kit. I dont want to mess the batteries up. How do I maintain them? Can I keep them on the charger. Take it off when fully charged. Take it off the tool when done or it doesn't matter. The tool is the flexvolt advantage 20v max reciprocating saw. Need help!

  • @promo130
    @promo130 Před 4 lety

    those that yellow fast charcher,alsp charge the dewalt dcb 187 3ah battery? its not an xr , i guess its an older version but not sure.

  • @bobsort
    @bobsort Před 4 lety +2

    Do those chargers work on 110V/220V?

  • @chet4804
    @chet4804 Před rokem

    Awesome info! Thank you.

  • @jarrodbeckett7337
    @jarrodbeckett7337 Před 2 lety +1

    Question:
    G'DAY Is it best for the batteries to charge the 9amp and 6amp batteries with a 4amp slow charge or 8amp quick charge?
    As in longer life and better full charge capacity.
    Iam finding my 9amp battery is not holding full charge for as long as it use to?
    🇦🇺

  • @expert244
    @expert244 Před 5 lety +1

    Good info, thanks.

  • @adamryan8086
    @adamryan8086 Před 2 lety

    So can I charge a 5 amp 20 volt battery with my high capacity charger?

  • @charlietaylor4277
    @charlietaylor4277 Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you, helped me considerably!

  • @sonyacisneros1500
    @sonyacisneros1500 Před 11 měsíci

    I have a DeWalt flexvolt but I no longer have the charger for it. As a matter of fact it’s been a long time since I’ve had one… Anyway I tried to charge it on my DeWalt 20v charger but it doesn’t fit. Am I doing something wrong?

  • @paginini
    @paginini Před 3 měsíci

    So any dcb115 wipp work with flexvolt 60v 20 9h ?

  • @6548ww
    @6548ww Před 6 lety +2

    will the dcd118 fast charger charge the smaller DeWalt 20v 2ah batteries?

  • @drecole3746
    @drecole3746 Před 7 lety

    hi there, great video. I've been planning on purchasing an impact wrench for auto repair and more, however i wanted to get maybe the 4 or 5Amp battery to go with it but not sure if i need a different charger for a higher amperage as i already have the DCB112 charger, do i need to upgrade on the charger as well or is the DCB112 ok for a 4 or 5Amp battery? Thanks in advance.

    • @8digitPDX
      @8digitPDX  Před 7 lety

      Andre Smith for a quarter inch drive on car interiors and lightweight stuff when you don't want to be snapping off fastener heads, use the 12v driver. For 3/8" drive and 1/2" drive, they make electric impact wrenches in the 20v lineup, but on larger 1/2" drive stuff you will likely want the flexvolt battery. The flexvolt battery in my opinion will be overkill in the 20v 1/4" hex drive impact drivers using the socket adapters. Expect to snap off eh socket adapters from time to time, but they are not that costly to replace and thus are semi-disposable. So if you snap off a $1.50 driver bit adapter in the course of a $250 job then that just goes with the territory. F you charged a client an extra half hour labor so you could drag the air compressor around and set up air tools for the job, then that's a little out of date billing method ethics in a lot of places.

    • @drecole3746
      @drecole3746 Před 7 lety

      So true..i appreciate the advice, definitely something to think about. Thanks again.

  • @wildbill23c
    @wildbill23c Před 7 lety +3

    I don't have any 60V tools...yet LOL. Been thinking about purchasing some of them especially the 7-1/4" circular saw. I'd love to get the 12" miter saw but not really sure what I'd use it for HAHA!!!

    • @8digitPDX
      @8digitPDX  Před 7 lety +1

      The easy way into the game is to just get a pair of flexvolt batteries and try them with your 20V tools. The 12" miter saw is pretty much only for guys cutting big timber. I use the smaller cordless miter saw for everything and sticking a flexvolt battery in it seemed to keep it from bogging down on thicker wood when cut lets say, through knots at an angle. Just remember, the flexvolt batteries are backward compatible to the 20v tools, but the 60v tools are NOT backward compatible to the 20V batteries.

    • @8digitPDX
      @8digitPDX  Před 7 lety +2

      By the time you subtract out the cost of the charger, carry bag and battery in the flexvolt saw kit vs the bare tool vs the 20v saw, you figure out the saws themselves are about the same price, but he smaller saw can take all of the batteries in the lineup. The bigger saw (flexvolt only) can cut thicker lumber, but they can both cut 2X lumber no problem, and the 71/4" saw is still not beefy enough to do 4X4s in a single pass. To cut 4X4s with either saw, you have to make your cut on one side, flip it over, then cut the other side.

    • @wildbill23c
      @wildbill23c Před 7 lety

      If I catch the flexvolt batteries on sale again I'll grab one. I got 2 of the 4aH 20V batteries a couple weeks ago on sale for $99. My local D&B has random Dewalt sales LOL.
      I don't have any use for the cordless 12" miter saw but I could see the cordless 7-1/4" miter saw being handy far more often.

    • @8digitPDX
      @8digitPDX  Před 7 lety +1

      William Todd That's the one I have. I use only the fine tooth blades in it and use it for everything from furniture work to rough lumber.

    • @wildbill23c
      @wildbill23c Před 7 lety

      8digitPDX Thanks, I'll definitely pickup the 7-1/4" cordless miter saw then. Makes more sense than the $800 12" one that I'd probably use once and never touch again.

  • @Jenuin
    @Jenuin Před 3 lety

    Thank you 🙏

  • @earthshipempire
    @earthshipempire Před 5 lety

    Both of my yellow chargers are broken only after 1,2 years of light use.
    I think the circuitry is faulty by design....or they got a bad batch of transformers... If you leave them plugged in, with or without a battery the transformer inside burns up.

  • @robalan57
    @robalan57 Před 7 lety

    The DeWalt Power Station charges four batteries at once. But I am thinking the fexvolt fast charger charges faster. So I would be better off getting four fast chargers for charging. Is that correct?

    • @8digitPDX
      @8digitPDX  Před 7 lety +2

      robalan57 it depends on what you are trying to accomplish and the kind of work that you are doing. Cost to benefit analysis for me is that I'll take a rapid charger that comes with a tool kit, but I won't buy one separately. I currently have four flexvolt and I think three of the 4AH 20v batteries in my inventory and my work schedule is such that I only would ever need to charge batteries once a week or so. On he other hand, I burn through my inventory of Ryobi P108 batteries regularly and when I get to working on a lot of battery drain stuff and will maybe sometimes outpace two rapid chargers, maybe. The only time one guy outpaces that many chargers is when running a crew.

  • @Zemu8
    @Zemu8 Před 4 lety

    Good video... Thanks...

  • @LKN4WAR
    @LKN4WAR Před 7 lety +3

    I have added a flexvolt to my already extensive Cordless systems, can't have too many systems lol. My question is this, would it be easier on the Flexvolt 6.0 batteries I got in the kit to use an older super slow charger like the DCB107 (272 minutes vs the DCB 118 @ 60 minutes). I always let batteries cool down and have no rush to get them back to work. I just buy a lot of extras. I've heard fast chargers are harder on the cells?

    • @8digitPDX
      @8digitPDX  Před 7 lety +3

      LKN4WAR Personally, my hunch is that you are right, but I don't know for sure. Fast charging a hot battery in my opinion, needs to be justified by the rate of pay on the job, not saving money on whether or not to buy more batteries since I prefer to leave a hot battery totally off the charger until it cools down. This last summer I did some jobs with a lot of hot charging of the Ryobi high capacity batteries on their rapid charger and it buggered a bunch of the batteries. I noticed when Dewalt designed their new charger/power station to go with the flexvolt batteries, they rigged it to run four stations simultaneously instead of something like the Ryobi system that did six batteries fast charging in sequence one at a time.

    • @nubscrub
      @nubscrub Před 6 lety

      Usually the fast charging versions of all the manufacturers have a built-in cooling fan

  • @bobbyoftulsa
    @bobbyoftulsa Před 4 lety

    if i were too modify the base on the dcb118, do you think it would charge my 12v ?

    • @antonsworkshopco
      @antonsworkshopco Před 4 lety

      No! It will not give off 12 volts more like 20v dont do it

  • @PureTruth
    @PureTruth Před rokem

    Thank you

  • @chillitrain9584
    @chillitrain9584 Před 6 lety +3

    Can I use my 20 v charger to chatge my flexvolt batteries or will it wreck my batteries

    • @shadowzedge5793
      @shadowzedge5793 Před 5 lety +1

      Yes you can, It will just take longer to charge it fully.

    • @jamesfair9751
      @jamesfair9751 Před 4 lety +2

      I know this is very old comment but not only can you charge the flexvolt batteries with the regular 20 volt charger it is better on the battery to charge slower.

  • @TheSHANEPRO
    @TheSHANEPRO Před 6 lety

    Hi . What dewalt charger will charge a 5ah battery the quickest . My currentcharger takes 90mins . There must be a faster way to charge a 5ah battery . I will buy new charger but don't want to waste my money on the wrong one. Thanks

    • @napzzter1
      @napzzter1 Před 6 lety

      If you are wondering this get the yellow fast charger, the only down side is it will not charge the smaller 12v system, but it is many times faster with all the 20v.

  • @alanr4263
    @alanr4263 Před 6 lety +1

    Hey what's up?I have the yellow DeWalt 60volt dcb118 when I charge the battery it's solid red it doesn't turn green?

    • @khoatran9560
      @khoatran9560 Před 6 lety +1

      Alan R they dont turn green, its stationary red when fully charged

    • @alanr4263
      @alanr4263 Před 6 lety

      Khoa Tran i seen in back of battery there's a little green ,3 green lights in back.

    • @saiyanpride8132
      @saiyanpride8132 Před 6 lety

      Can I use a 112 charger to charge a flex battery? Cause I tried charging it and it stays in red like its charged but the battery indicator shows only one green bar

    • @tropicthunderbolt
      @tropicthunderbolt Před 5 lety +2

      @@alanr4263 that just shows how much charge is on it wen in use. Actuall charging , it only will show red on the charger...

  • @countryside8122
    @countryside8122 Před 3 lety

    Why does a 1.5 amp charger only charge a 2 amp battery to 2 green lights on the battery instead of 3 green lights? One charger will charge then to 3 green lights and the other will not. Both are the same.

  • @danielguzman3630
    @danielguzman3630 Před 5 lety +1

    Can 2 an charger charge a 60 flex folt 6ah?

    • @shadowzedge5793
      @shadowzedge5793 Před 5 lety +2

      Yes you can, It will just take a lot longer to charge it fully.

  • @mylesmastersen3520
    @mylesmastersen3520 Před 5 lety +1

    My 4 amp charger gets hot after charging a 20 volt 6ah battery. Granted it takes 1hr 45 mins. Is this normal and will it cause damage. Not plastic melting hot but very warm to the touch.

  • @leonspringsboystv2025
    @leonspringsboystv2025 Před 6 lety +13

    I'm a DeWalt addict. You should see my setup

    • @AKCD35
      @AKCD35 Před 5 lety

      Leon Springs Boys TV I’m on my way lol

  • @Orrphan
    @Orrphan Před 6 lety

    I have a black and yellow 2 amp charger. It charges all my 20 volt batts including my new 6.0 amp but with my other new flex volt 6.0 it won't charge. It keeps going to a solid light like it is overheated. Frustrating cuz from day one when new I have always had to keep plugging batts in and out of charger before I get flashing light no matter what batts including 2.0 and 4.0. Faulty charger or not capable of charging flex?

    • @jonathanalvarez292
      @jonathanalvarez292 Před 5 lety

      Orrphan I having the same problem did you ever find a solution? Was the charger just not powerful enough?

    • @emeteriofer1
      @emeteriofer1 Před 3 lety

      Por

  • @UeLeBeton
    @UeLeBeton Před 7 lety +1

    When using 20v tool with 60v battery, does it work as 20v (6.0 AH)? OR is it 2.0AH ?
    When using 60v tool with 60v battery, does it worh 6.0H or 2.0AH?
    Tnx

    • @8digitPDX
      @8digitPDX  Před 7 lety +2

      Predrag Ostojic it works as a 6AH battery which is what the battery really is. There is a physical switch on the battery that is pushed in to make it a 2AH 60v when it is either inserted in a 60V tool or has the transport cover on it. That is to comply with FAA regulations over the flight transport and shipment of higher amperage lithium battery packs. The flexvolt battery, in reality, is a large capacity 20v battery with a switch mechanism that can run the three internal banks of batteries in series. Thus it will be a 6/2AH battery, or a 9/3AH battery depending on the model.

    • @UeLeBeton
      @UeLeBeton Před 7 lety

      Tnx

    • @k.whiking4372
      @k.whiking4372 Před 6 lety

      Thank you for the info.

  • @ebsell
    @ebsell Před 5 lety

    My 60 volt batteries don’t last any longer on my wipper snipper than my 5 amp hr batteries. Thought they would last way longer. Huge disappointment

    • @garradmiller5025
      @garradmiller5025 Před 5 lety +1

      Should last slightly longer. What were you expecting? 5ah vs 6ah at 20 volts.

  • @ama7509
    @ama7509 Před 2 lety

    Put the damn battery into respective charges to see how they fit!

  • @kirkragland7563
    @kirkragland7563 Před 4 lety

    Good video, not entierly correct I have black chargers that wont charge 12v so its not universal.

  • @glazioushell3398
    @glazioushell3398 Před rokem

    I can’t believe I just wasted five minutes and 51 seconds just a lot of talking but no action I wanna see how fast it takes to charge a battery

  • @BigDaddysPlati
    @BigDaddysPlati Před 5 lety

    Na I’ll stick to Milwaukee