truckdriver
Well-known member
I wish Milwaukee made a 12V M12/M18 charger. They have them separately but no combo.I do have a 120V combo charger. I was wondering if using a modified sine wave inverter would shorten battery life?
On a recent hunting trip i charged my dewalts on an inverter and they worked great. But ive only done it once
I wish Milwaukee made a 12V M12/M18 charger. They have them separately but no combo.I do have a 120V combo charger. I was wondering if using a modified sine wave inverter would shorten battery life?
Powering the Charger with an Inverter or Generator
The charger will operate with most generators and inverters rated at 300 Watts or higher.
Won't make a bit of difference - the chargers all convert AC to DC to charge the batteries. And with LiIon you have to get that right or the batteries explode. Why people get less use out of batteries charged in this way is because of the temperature extremes in the car. Hot in the summer and cold in the winter, both of which are tough on batteries.
You'll be fine - Milwaukee puts this in the manual:
They are on the hook if it lets the magic smoke out or toasts your batteries in warranty.
Won't make a bit of difference - the chargers all convert AC to DC to charge the batteries. And with LiIon you have to get that right or the batteries explode. Why people get less use out of batteries charged in this way is because of the temperature extremes in the car. Hot in the summer and cold in the winter, both of which are tough on batteries.
You'll be fine - Milwaukee puts this in the manual:
They are on the hook if it lets the magic smoke out or toasts your batteries in warranty.