Cordless drill decision

I'm presently in Australia (230VAC 50 Hz). I have a Porter Cable 12V Cordless drill. I bought two pairs of 12V battery rebuilds - none worked. Looking for a replacement on Amazon, I saw several reviews of the Porter Cable charger that said it was worthless. I can't find a generic charger. So..., I could buy another P-C charger, either 12V or 9.6-19V or another battery (original P-C), or forget the whole thing and get a new Panasonic NIMh 15.6. The charger will be operated off a transformer. Has anyone had any experience with the P-C batteries, chargers or the Panasonic? Thanks!
 
Since its 12 volt and if worse comes to worse, try hooking it up to your car battery.
 
I had one of those Magnaquench drills and it too had a bad charger. I bought a Ryobi 12 volt charger for 17 bucks and it worked just fine. I'm done with the drill and if you were closer I would ship the charger to you free but I don't think I want to ship it half way round the world.
 
"The charger will be operated off a transformer"

Be sure it's a real transformer and not one of those rectifier convertors. It should be heavy like it's filled with iron.

If it's not a transformer then the charger won't work and can even be damaged by it.
 
DO NOT, under any circumstances, hook a cordless tool battery to an automobile battery or charger, even if the voltage rating is the same. NiCad and NiMH batterys charge at a constant current, not at a constant voltage like a lead acid battery. Whatever charger you use for a cordless tool battery must be current limited - connecting a NiCad bettery to a large current source such as a car battery will rapidly result in an overheated and possibly exploding NiCad.

Most cheap chargers with a wall-wart transformer depend on the inherent resistance of the transformer to limit charge current. More elaborate ones electronically limit current based on battery state of charge and temperature.

Keith
 
The Ryobi idea is a good one, but the batteries I have are of the slide in contact design rather than the male design. The transformers I have are indeed heavy, so I must have the right ones (I'm electrically challenged). Thanks
 
The Ryobi CD125, model 4400006, is the slide contact design with the third temperature contact not the spade and lug design of the later models. It is a 120 VAC, 60 cycle charger however.
 
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