Hi,
I am not sure where this originated, so if it was the list, I apologize!
Battery ripoffs jolted

Mar 31, 2007 04:30 AM
Steve Maxwell

Today's cordless tools and electronic devices are amazing. At least until
the batteries get lazy. That's when I brace myself to get ripped off
royally.
The sad fact is that when it comes to replacement batteries for cordless
equipment, most manufacturers can't resist the opportunity to earn "surplus
profits"
at our expense. How else can you explain the fact that replacement tool
batteries usually cost almost as much as buying a brand new cordless tool -
battery,
case and accessories included? The situation is obviously engineered to take
advantage of consumers' vulnerable position, but all that's changed. The
monopoly
has been broken across the board, and by Canadians, too.

I stumbled onto this happy development in early March. I was walking the
aisles of the Canadian Home Workshop show, looking for interesting new
things,
when I noticed a booth for a company called BatteryBuyer.com (800-730-8658;
www.batterybuyer.ca).

At first I thought it was one of those firms that rebuilds old cordless tool
battery packs by installing new cells at slightly less than the outrageous
cost of new batteries from tool manufacturers. Nothing new there, but then I
took a closer look. I'm glad I did.

The folks at BatteryBuyer.com have done what should have happened before.
Two years ago they began selling brand new rechargeable battery packs for
virtually
every kind of cordless device known - tools, cellphones, cameras, cordless
phones and even iPods (including battery-changing instructions and tools for
opening the case). They charge reasonable prices, maintain an excellent
retail website, offer economical shipping options for worldwide delivery,
and their
batteries are often better than what came from the manufacturer originally.
To see exactly how they're better, you need to understand a little-known
feature
of all rechargeable batteries.

Every cordless device is designed to use a battery of one specific voltage.
But voltage only tells half the cordless battery story. The other half is
something
called milliamp-hours (mAh). If cordless tools were cars, voltage would be
roughly correspondent to the horsepower of the engine.

Milliamp-hours, on the other hand, correspond to the size of the gas tank.
Battery packs with high mAh ratings run longer before needing a recharge,
though
there's a problem. Many tool companies downplay the mAh ratings of the
batteries they offer. If you look closely, you might find a 1.2 mAh or 1.7
mAh rating
stamped in fine print on the battery somewhere, but as often as not you'll
find nothing.

By contrast, the decision makers at BatteryBuyer.com have opted for a full
disclosure policy, plainly listing mAh ratings, then going one step beyond.
Besides
offering lower battery prices than most original equipment manufacturers
sell for, BatteryBuyer.com offers batteries with higher mAh ratings. They
also
use Panasonic cells exclusively in all their battery packs - widely
recognized as tops in the rechargeable battery scene.

If better batteries for less money were actually possible, then why has no
one done it before? Based on my preliminary experience with these products,
the
batteries are great, too. I've tried their replacements in a 14.4-volt
DeWALT impact driver ($45 battery cost) and 18-volt Ryobi ($40). My tools
have noticeably
more power, speed and endurance. BatteryBuyer.com also sells batteries for
those beloved old 7.2-volt and 9.6-volt ($25 to $35) Makita drills that
people
love to keep using because they're so light in weight and compact.

To be fair, Ryobi is one tool manufacturer that decided to end replacement
battery extortion voluntarily. Replacement batteries for their One-Plus
system
have been reasonably priced at $35 for a number of years now. But when it
comes to Ryobi replacements, BatteryBuyer.com has upped the ante. They offer
nickel metal hydride (Ni-mH) battery packs with substantially higher mAh
ratings for just a little more than stock Ryobi battery prices. Ni-mH is a
battery
technology that Ryobi itself has never offered.

For all its faults, capitalism does have its good points. When excess
profits are being earned, it makes people take notice.
Contact Steve Maxwell at
www.stevemaxwell.ca.






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