ENGLISH
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• When operating a charger outdoors,
always provide a dry location and use an
extension cord suitable for outdoor use.
Use of a cord suitable for outdoor use reduces
the risk of electric shock.
• Do not block the ventilation slots on the
charger. The ventilation slots are located
on the top and sides of the charger.
Place
the charger in a position away from any heat
source.
• Do not operate charger with damaged cord
or plug
— have them replaced immediately.
•
Do not operate charger if it has received
a sharp blow, been dropped or otherwise
damaged in any way.
Take it to an authorised
service centre.
• Do not disassemble the charger; take
it to an authorised service centre when
service or repair is required.
Incorrect
reassembly may result in a risk of electric shock,
electrocution or fire.
• In case of damaged power supply cord the
supply cord must be replaced immediately by
the manufacturer, its service agent or similar
qualified person to prevent any hazard.
• Disconnect the charger from the outlet
before attempting any cleaning. This will
reduce the risk of electric shock.
Removing
the battery pack will not reduce this risk.
• NEVER
attempt to connect 2 chargers
together.
• The charger is designed to operate on
standard 230 V household electrical power.
Do not attempt to use it on any other
voltage.
This does not apply to the vehicular
charger.
SAVE THESE INSTRUCTIONS
Chargers
The DCB105 charger accepts 10.8 V, 14.4 V and
18 V Li-Ion (DCB121, DCB123, DCB140, DCB141,
DCB142, DCB143, DCB180, DCB181, DCB182,
DCB183, DCB184 and DCB185) battery packs.
This charger requires no adjustment and is designed
to be as easy as possible to operate.
Charging Procedure (fi g. 2)
1. Plug the charger into an appropriate 230 V
outlet before inserting the battery pack.
2. Insert the battery pack (l) into the charger,
making sure the pack is fully seated in the
charger. The red (charging) light will blink
continuously indicating that the charging
process has started.
3. The completion of charge will be indicated by
the red light remaining ON continuously. The
pack is fully charged and may be used at this
time or left in the charger.
NOTE:
To ensure maximum performance and life of
Li-Ion batteries, charge the battery pack fully before
first use.
Charging Process
Refer to the table below for the state of charge of
the battery pack.
State of charge
charging
–– –– –– ––
fully
charged
–––––––––––––––––
hot/cold pack delay
–– • –– • –– • –– •
x
problem pack or charger • • • • • • • • • • • •
problem powerline
•• •• •• •• •• ••
This charger will not charge a faulty battery pack.
The charger will indicate faulty battery by refusing to
light or by displaying problem pack or charger blink
pattern.
NOTE:
This could also mean a problem with a
charger.
If the charger indicates a problem, take the charger
and battery pack to be tested at an authorised
service centre.
Hot/Cold Pack Delay
When the charger detects a battery that is too hot
or too cold, it automatically starts a hot/cold pack
delay, suspending charging until the battery has
reached an appropriate temperature. The charger
then automatically switches to the pack charging
mode. This feature ensures maximum battery life.
XR Li-Ion tools are designed with an Electronic
Protection System that will protect the battery
against overloading, overheating or deep discharge.
The tool will automatically turn off if the Electronic
Protection System engages. If this occurs, place the
Li-Ion battery on the charger until it is fully charged.
A cold battery pack will charge at about half the rate
of a warm battery pack. The battery pack will charge
at that slower rate throughout the entire charging
cycle and will not return to maximum charge rate
even if the battery warms.
Summary of Contents for DCN690
Page 1: ...DCN690 DCN691 DCN692 ...
Page 3: ...1 Figure 1 h g c m d i f g l c d b k j e f DCN692 DCN690 DCN692 n a ...
Page 4: ...2 Figure 3 Figure 2 Figure 2a g f q b o p l ...
Page 5: ...3 Figure 6 Figure 7 d j Figure 5 Figure 4 h r ...
Page 6: ...4 k aa bb gg ff hh ee cc cc dd ee aa Figure 8a Figure 8c Figure 8d Figure 8e Figure 8b bb ...
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