joseywales
Well-known member
I searched but found the last time this was discussed was 2013 and things might have changed.
I have mostly Ryobi, but some Milwaukee.
- The Ryobi chargers have a Maintenance mode.
- Ryobi vacuums, at least appear, to want the battery in and charging 24/7 with the wall mounted chargers.
So do you leave your batteries in a charger?
If yes, there's probably some loss of overall life, but not enough to worry about, i.e. cost of convenience?
I have two vacuums, so I could have at least two batteries ready at all times, even if I don't use my other chargers. I'm thinking of using some of my other chargers, to keep batteries charged, as well. But maybe I don't need to. If I was planning a large job, I could always charge batteries prior.
Of course, none of the above applies to my M12/M18, because I don't have any vacuums. So I have to decide, do I try to keep those charged or not.
Thoughts?
I have mostly Ryobi, but some Milwaukee.
- The Ryobi chargers have a Maintenance mode.
- Ryobi vacuums, at least appear, to want the battery in and charging 24/7 with the wall mounted chargers.
So do you leave your batteries in a charger?
If yes, there's probably some loss of overall life, but not enough to worry about, i.e. cost of convenience?
I have two vacuums, so I could have at least two batteries ready at all times, even if I don't use my other chargers. I'm thinking of using some of my other chargers, to keep batteries charged, as well. But maybe I don't need to. If I was planning a large job, I could always charge batteries prior.
Of course, none of the above applies to my M12/M18, because I don't have any vacuums. So I have to decide, do I try to keep those charged or not.
Thoughts?
And I have three of those.