BubbaJr
Platinum Member
<font color="blue"> Batteries left to sit on the shelf with little to no charge in them can reverse polarity. [For occasional use batteries] reverse polarity is the primary cause of dead cordless batteries. Once one cell in a chain reverses polarity and goes bad, it effectively makes the whole battery bad. </font>
I had a friend in the radio repair business, that was an electronics genius. He found that if you apply about 15-50V DC (depending on the battery) at around 2 amps to the dead battery (applied with the proper polarity) that most times you can bring a "dead" battery back to life. I've been doing this for years with over a 50% save ratio. I have an adjustable power supply that I use to apply the juice for around 2-3 seconds, then put it on the charger. There is nothing critical about this procedure other than holding the power to the battery too long. You can feel it get warm, then it's time to remove the power. I'm not suggesting that anyone try this, but I know it works for me, but your mileage may vary. /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif
I had a friend in the radio repair business, that was an electronics genius. He found that if you apply about 15-50V DC (depending on the battery) at around 2 amps to the dead battery (applied with the proper polarity) that most times you can bring a "dead" battery back to life. I've been doing this for years with over a 50% save ratio. I have an adjustable power supply that I use to apply the juice for around 2-3 seconds, then put it on the charger. There is nothing critical about this procedure other than holding the power to the battery too long. You can feel it get warm, then it's time to remove the power. I'm not suggesting that anyone try this, but I know it works for me, but your mileage may vary. /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif