![]() I did not find something to explain this yet. Nothing else wrong with them they had the stated capacity, the original cells, everything was good except this. The only thing I found strange so far was a lot that I had from 2019-2020 of 5Ah ones that were practically self-discharging extremely fast, as in more than half capacity each month. I have plenty of them still that are 4-5 years old and have more than 85% of their capacity intact. All originals were excellent, even very old ones. I had hundreds of such batteries ranging from 2Ah and ending up with 12Ah with most intermediaries between (3, 4, 5, 9 and the newer 3 and 8Ah). This is as far as things went for DeWalt.īut let’s get back at Milwaukee batteries. Batteries are even labeled 36V and have only 4 cells (so it’s a 14.4V tool). Don’t get me wrong, may are actually usable and good for low power precision work but will instantly fail at work that suppose to be achievable for them. In DeWalt’s case it’s a lot worse, there are low quality tools overmarked, nicely painted and sold as originals even if they are totally low entry level tools. Just like you have the blue or striped “ultrafire” 18650 cells that are marked over 4000mAh and they actually have between 100 and 400 usually and that’s just for a few charges, you also have fakes for power tool batteries. In the power tools industry, just like in the Li-Ion cell industry there’s an invasion of fakes on the market. There are quite some unexplained low ratings there while many ratings are very good or excellent. ![]() I decided to write about this subject after looking at the official feedback review of Milwaukee batteries on their official websites. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |