Lithium ion batteries are a wondrous invention that are lightweight and long lasting. But it's infuriating when the battery won't recharge. You stick the battery in the charger and ... nothing. Guess what? You can fix these batteries that appear to be completely dead. Read on ...
This post is NOT sponsored by Ryobi. They do not approve of or endorse this method for fixing a Ryobi battery. AT all.
Jump straight to the tutorial and how to video.
One of two things are going to happen as you read this post. You will either unfollow me due to my pathological boringness or ... you will propose marriage. So get ready to act accordingly.
If you have any sort of cordless power tool, but especially one powered by a Ryobi 18V battery, you have no doubt encountered the dreaded flashing red charger light.
And if you haven't ... you will.
It inevitably goes like this - you run to the basement to grab your cordless drill because after 10 years of thinking about it, you're finally going to build that 4 level, Tudor style treehouse with kitchenette.
Or you're going to hang a picture. (I can teach you how to hang a picture too)
Either way you put your battery in the charger and all you get is a flashing red light, which according to the label on the charger means your battery is defective. It isn't just dead. It's "defective".
I'm here to tell you it isn't. You probably left it in the charger too long which drains the battery.
Your battery is fine. It just needs a little boost.
This is where you want to go if you're looking for how to boost a car battery.
Table of Contents
You Can Fix a Rechargeable Battery That Won't Take a Charge.
You heard me right. You do NOT have to buy a new $50 battery. You do not have to call the company and swear at them because this stupid "defective" battery is only 2 weeks old. (although by all means feel free to do so) You do not have to wait until they ship you a replacement battery to finish your project. You can get that battery up and working in about 5 minutes.
NOTE: First try pulse charging.
Pulse charge your battery by plugging and unplugging your charger (with the battery in it) for 10 seconds. Try this a few times. If it doesn't correct the problem, continue on with this tutorial.
How to Fix an 18V Battery
What You Need
- A lithium ion battery that won't charge
- An AC adapter (an old phone charger for example)
- A multimeter. (this is actually optional but helpful ... if you don't have one don't worry, you can still fix your battery)
Note: If you aren't used to doing this sort of thing, or using things like a "multimeter" this is going to seem crazy hard and way out of your DIY league. It isn't.
Steps
Step 1. Cut the end off of your AC adapter. That's right. Just cut it off. It's for a 10 year old cell phone, you're never going to use it again anyway. It's frankly kind of weird that you saved it to begin with.
Step 2. Separate and strip off 1" of each wire. You have *just* made booster cables! Good for you.
TIP:
Black wire = negative Striped or solid white wire = positive
IT IS VERY IMPORTANT TO NOT MIX THE TWO UP.
Step 3. Remove the screws holding the battery together.
For Ryobi batteries it's a star shaped screw head like the one below.
A few years ago I bought a kit of small screwdriver heads from Amazon that has every small, weird, head you'd ever need.
TIP:
There's a hidden screw under a piece of plastic. You need to pry the plastic off to get at the screw underneath. I used a very thin screwdriver to pry it off.
Step 4. Pull the top off of the battery case.
Step 5. Remove the 2 plastic side pieces. They're the things you press in to remove your battery from your drill.
Step 6. Lift the battery pack out.
Step 7. Set the Multimeter to read volts. For testing an 18 volt battery choose the 20 volts setting. This will give you the most accurate reading. (If you don't have a multimeter skip to Step 9 and hope for the best)
TIP
Volts are symbolized by a "V" with one or two straight lines over it on a multimeter so it's that section of the multimeter that you use. The section under the V with the straight line(s). Not the squiggly line. The straight line.
Step 8. Touching the red probe to the positive (red) terminal and the black probe to the negative (black) terminal, read the voltage shown on the multimeter. In my case the battery was carrying a charge of 0.06 volts. Which is *almost* nothing, but not completely nothing.
Step 9. Plug your AC adapter in and using the wires, boost your dead battery. Just touch the black wire to the negative terminal (the one with the black wire going to it) and the white wire (or striped wire) to the positive terminal (the one with the red wire going to it). Do this on and off for approximately a minute.
TIP
Apparently lithium ion batteries should be "pulse" charged. Which means you hold your wires down for 15 seconds or so, then release them. Then hold them down again. Over and over.
DOUBLE CHECK THAT YOU ARE TOUCHING POSITIVE TO POSITIVE AND NEGATIVE TO NEGATIVE.
Step 10. Test your the voltage on your battery pack again. It should be higher than it was before boosting. (Again, if you don't have a multimeter don't worry about this - you'll just have to press on without one)
Mine went from 0.06 volts to 7.58 volts after a minute long boosting session.
Step 11. Put the plastic cover back on the battery pack (just the part that goes into the charger) and set your battery on the charger to see if it will take a charge.
If you still only get a red flashing light and the battery won't charge, boost the battery some more. I find the battery charger will recognize that the battery is good again when you boost it to between 10 and 14 volts.
Just keep repeating the "pulse" boosting and testing the battery until it will finally be recognized by the charger and you get the green light.
To those of you who found this subject matter to be on par with spending 3 hours in a waiting room, sorry 'bout that.
For the rest of you? I know exactly how you feel. I felt the same way. Let me know exactly how elated you were after you brought your first battery back to life in the comments section.
Here's a 3 minute tutorial video showing me as I fix my own battery.
How to Fix a Ryobi 18v Rechargeable Battery
Instructions
- Cut the end off of your AC adapter. That's right. Just cut it off. It's for a 10 year old cell phone, you're never going to use it again anyway. It's frankly kind of weird that you saved it to begin with.
- Separate and strip off 1" of each wire. You have *just* made booster cables! Good for you.
- Remove the screws holding the battery together. There's a hidden screw under a piece of plastic. You need to pry the plastic off to get at the screw underneath. I used a very thin screwdriver to pry it off.
- Pull the top off of the battery case.
- Remove the 2 plastic side pieces. They're the things you press in to remove your battery from your drill.
- Lift the battery pack out.
- Set the Multimeter to read volts. For testing an 18 volt battery choose the 20 volts setting. This will give you the most accurate reading. (If you don't have a multimeter skip to Step 9 and hope for the best)
- Touching the red probe to the positive (red) terminal and the black probe to the negative (black) terminal, read the voltage shown on the multimeter. In my case the battery was carrying a charge of 0.06 volts. Which is *almost* nothing, but not completely nothing.
- Plug your AC adapter in and using the wires, boost your dead battery. Just touch the black wire to the negative terminal (the one with the black wire going to it) and the white wire (or striped wire) to the positive terminal (the one with the red wire going to it). Do this on and off for approximately a minute. DOUBLE CHECK THAT YOU ARE TOUCHING POSITIVE TO POSITIVE AND NEGATIVE TO NEGATIVE.
- Test your the voltage on your battery pack again. It should be higher than it was before boosting. IF IT IS NOT, THEN STOP. YOUR CELL COULD BE DAMAGED AND CONTINUING COULD BE DANGEROUS.
- Put the plastic cover back on the battery pack (just the part that goes into the charger) and set your battery on the charger to see if it will take a charge. If you still only get a red flashing light and the battery won't charge, boost the battery some more. I find the battery charger will recognize that the battery is good again when you boost it to between 10 and 14 volts.
- Repeat the "pulse" boosting and testing the battery until it will finally be recognized by the charger and you get the green light.
- Reassemble your battery. Your rechargeable battery is now fixed.
Video
Notes
- Black wire = negative Striped or solid white wire = positive It is very important to not mix the two up.
- There's a hidden screw under a piece of plastic. You need to pry the plastic off to get at the screw underneath. I used a very thin screwdriver to pry it off.
- Volts are symbolized by a "V" with one or two straight lines over it on a multimeter so it's that section of the multimeter that you use. The section under the V with the straight line(s). Not the squiggly line. The straight line.
- Lithium ion batteries need to be "pulse" charged. Which means you hold your wires down for 15 seconds or so, then release them. Then hold them down again. Over and over.
Please direct marriage proposals to my publicist. A certain tool company is *not* interested in proposing marriage to me. So I'd like to make a point of saying I love these tools and use them all the time. Their batteries and chargers on the other hand, could use some improvement.
OTHER WAYS TO FIX THINGS.
- How to Unclog Your Central Vacuum
- How to Sharpen a Push Mower
- How to Replace Carbon Brushes on Any Motor
- How to Mend a Broken Fingernail (because you're surely going to need it after replacing carbon brushes)
Questions & Answers
- Is there an easier way to do this? Possibly. Some people have had success with putting the battery in the charger and waiting for the red light to come on. Then you pulse charge the battery by quickly plugging and unplugging the charger.
- What voltage does the charger need to be? A 12 volt charger will do the trick.
- Isn't this dangerous? There is a small chance of BIG danger. So proceed with caution. If a cell doesn't immediately charge a little bit with this technique, stop. If anything (charger, cells, wires) starts to heat up, STOP.
- How long will the battery last after fixing them this way? Until you accidentally leave it in the charger too long again, or until the battery's natural death.
Seeing as you're the sort of person to make it all the way down here to the end of this post, you might like to learn how to install a battery operated electric fence around a home vegetable garden.
*Proceed with caution and follow instructions exactly. Failing to do so could lead to injury.*
Brien Sullivan
I tried your first suggestion, plug for charger with battery in and out to electrical outlet for ten seconds. I'll be dammed, it worked. Thank you very much!
Karen
You're welcome Brien, glad it worked for you. ~ karen!
Eric
This is an amazing way to save money. In my case it was a four amp hour battery and one of my crew kept using it and using it and using it until it wouldn't use anymore. With the Ryobi tools this happens if you overuse the battery. Unfortunately when the battery stops working if you wait a few seconds you can get a few more minutes out of it but that drains it so far that it needs to be boosted the way you described. Thank you for this post and I hope my comment helps
Karen
Thanks Eric! And you're absolutely right about the Ryobi batteries draining and then being able to run again for a little bit if you let it rest. I know I'm bad for trying to get every single second out of it, instead of taking it to charge. ~ karen1
Rick Cataldo
I READ YOUR ENTIRE TUTORIAL AND I WAS WONDERING IFI COULD DO THE SAME WITH MAKITA BATTERIES. THE LXT 18 VOLT VERSIONS. I HAVE ABOUT 7 OF THESE.
Jason Kerr
Why do you have to take apart the battery to do this?
David Czernik
Thank you. I had three of my original Ryobi batts fail at the same time. I have others. This saves my sanity, such as it is questioned by my dogs.
Mary
I like it. Going to try it for sure. Thanks.
Tasha
I love you! Thank u so much . I just fixed my chainsaw battery by pulse charging it and my blower. Forever grateful and thankful I came across this.
Karen
That's great Tasha! Glad I could help. ~ karen!
Shehan
This worked! Saved me 100 dollars for the 40V! Didn't take that long - started recognising the battery around the 14V.
Jerry M. Lewis
It worked. I've now restored/recovered/revived half a dozen Ryobi 18V batteries. However I do have one that will not revive even with this trick. I'm considering rebuilding the battery pack...
Robert Simoneau
How about the 40 volt batteries are they jump able
Shehan
Yes, I just used this for a 40V
Mike
I've got several batteries dead...going to try this...Thank you.
David
Loved it. Adding this to my other battery revival techniques. Again thank you
Jorge Preciado
Awesome job
VickiL
You had me at pulse charging. I was about to buy a new battery for the string trimmer and found your page. I'm not mechanically inclined in any way, but the pulse charging was so easy, an old lady like me could do it. Thank you for saving me at least $50!
Karen
From one (almost) old lady to another, I'm happy to help. ~ karen!
JR Hill
The five T-10 size Torx screws on all my batteries are the 'safety' style with the peg in the center so a regular bit won't insert far enough for the splines to engage. So if you can't loosen the screws it's not necessarily the wrong bit.
Why can't the battery 'pulsed' right at the charger contacts?
Michael R. Mendes
I took a hammer to the screwdriver to get it down the side of the cap, then it came off easily. My AC adapter was 29V out, which I think is too much, but it brought my battery back with two pulses, and a couple of sparks, LOL. I also didn't have a multimeter, but a simple "battery tester" from about 1960 that still showed charge nicely. A Torx works as well for the screws.
steven wonder
I had a Ryobi battery that went dead in a non-Ryobi device. It was about 0.04V when I hooked the meter up to it. Did your process with great results. Thanks. Some changes to the procedure. I kept the plastic locking tabs in place, no sense taking them out as they remained quite safely in the battery. Instead of cutting the wires on the 12V power supply, I just used a barrel end jack adapter (you can purchase on Amazon or maybe get at a local hobby shop) and plugged it in. I then attached my jumper cables to it.
Andrew
Very interesting. I wonder which voltages and amperages are ideal for the AC adapter.
And I think it is very important to specify that this should be an AC to DC adapter. The output of the adapter should be DC.
Also important would be a warning that improperly charging batteries can be dangerous leading to fires and explosions.
Rich
Best if these procedures are done outside, in case one of the batteries suddenly catches fire, which is next to impossible to put out.
Robert
Very clear instructions, photos.
It worked for me.
Thanks.
Karen
Thanks Robert, I'm glad you had success. ~ karen!