Boomyal
Supreme Mariner
- Joined
- Aug 16, 2003
- Messages
- 12,072
As far as I can find, this does not exist amoung all the name brand timers. I need a timer that will turn on every 30 days for a several hour period. The most I can find are 7 day timers and they can be horribly expensive.
I am going to build a board of battery chargers for NickleMetalHydride tool batteries. Often times these batteries sit for long periods of time without use. When you put one of the batteries in the charger, the battery will take whatever it needs then the charger will virtually shut off. (in this case, a makita charger)
After a period of time you can pull the battery out of the charger (showing fully charged), reinsert it and the charger will show that it is charging again.
Experts tell me that you should charge an idle battery every 30 days. This is what I want to do. I have 4 chargers that I want to mount to a board and plug them all into a power strip. I want a timer that will supply power for several hours then shut off.
The object is to give these idle batteries a few hours of charge every 30 days. I have numerous tools that operate off the same battery but I don't use them every day.
A charging cycle like this will keep these batteries usefull for as long as it is possible.
I just have to figure out how to accomplish this.
I am going to build a board of battery chargers for NickleMetalHydride tool batteries. Often times these batteries sit for long periods of time without use. When you put one of the batteries in the charger, the battery will take whatever it needs then the charger will virtually shut off. (in this case, a makita charger)
After a period of time you can pull the battery out of the charger (showing fully charged), reinsert it and the charger will show that it is charging again.
Experts tell me that you should charge an idle battery every 30 days. This is what I want to do. I have 4 chargers that I want to mount to a board and plug them all into a power strip. I want a timer that will supply power for several hours then shut off.
The object is to give these idle batteries a few hours of charge every 30 days. I have numerous tools that operate off the same battery but I don't use them every day.
A charging cycle like this will keep these batteries usefull for as long as it is possible.
I just have to figure out how to accomplish this.