I'm suspicious

Joined
Jan 2, 2005
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Northern Illinois
I recently bought a new DeWalt portable air pump that runs on a DeWalt 20v lithium battery. I already had two such batteries for my cordless DeWalt drill, but thought having a third battery would make life easier, i.e., one with each tool and one on the charger. When I looked at buying a new battery at a couple of local stores, the price was right around $170. But Amazon showed the battery at $30, so I ordered one even though I was a bit suspicious about the huge difference in price. The battery arrived and was totally dead and would not take a charge. Amazon refunded my money and I ordered a second one, which hasn't yet arrived. But I will not be surprised if the new battery also fails even though it supposedly is a genuine DeWalt product since the price difference just does not make sense to me. Anyone else ever run into this issue?
 
Facebook (META) is worse. Facebook makes 16 billion a year allowing fake ads, scams, and medical advice.

AI Overview

Based on a November 2025 investigative report by
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I went through the same thing with Hitachi 18 volt and Ryobi 40 volt batteries but wound up with clone replacement batteries which over time have proven to be as good as the brand names at a fraction of the cost.

Amen to the scammers on Amazon, truth that is.

The one thing with Ryobi clones I found is the AH ratings are Waayyy overstated. A pair of labeled "7Ah" batteries I bought discharge and charge at the same rate and are the same physical size as my genuine Ryobi 4Ah battery. Be aware that with rechargeable battery packs size matters and you can't get nearly double the performance without increasing the pack size without a startling new discovery in battery chemistry.
 
PS, if you own a lawn mower and it needs work or replacement consider going electric. My Ryobi is absolutely phenomenal. Compared to my old gas mower, it's so comparatively quiet I can mow earlier in the morning and later in the evening when it's cooler in south Florida's hot summers and not disturb my neighbors!

No more gas to go buy, nor fumes in the garage, none of the starter cord pulling, they're 20-30+ pounds lighter to push around and neighbors look at you with envy :-)
 
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A neighbor has an electric push mower, but it only cuts a foot or so swath. Takes his kid a while to get the job done.

I have too much lawn to push a mower around. Maybe Tesla will come out with a rider line 🤷‍♂️
 
My Ryobi push mower's cut is 20" and the 21" model is self propelled. I mowed for years with a 24" and the 20" is no sacrifice to use.

Now if I had a large property I'd still buy gas.
 
Takes me about 4 hrs +, and 5 gallons of gas in my JD S240 (42" deck, 25hp) to completely mow what I have to mow - including small wild saplings. No way some battery mower would work.

S240-42.jpg
 
Gunny, the JD looks new so it's a moot point I guess, but a 52-60" zero turn would cut your time into less than half along with your fuel consumption. OTOH, it's hard to drink beer while operating a zero turn. 4 hours on the JD could be interesting.

Now, about the battery. $170 sounds ridiculous as does 30. No red flags? Most big name sellers offer the 20V Lithium "Dewalt" brand for 80-100 bucks a pair.... No name knock offs need not apply IMO. As the OP may have found out. Suggest you google & see what the big names,,,, WM, Lowes, etc. ast for a pair. Scams, poor knock offs, or counterfeit items are everywhere these days. Caveat emptor.
 
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Gunny, the JD looks new so it's a moot point I guess, but a 52-60" zero turn would cut your time into less than half along with your fuel consumption. OTOH, it's hard to drink beer while operating a zero turn. 4 hours on the JD could be interesting.

Now, about the battery. $170 sounds ridiculous as does 30. No red flags? Most big name sellers offer the 20V Lithium "Dewalt" brand for 80-100 bucks a pair.... No name knock offs need not apply IMO. As the OP may have found out. Suggest you google & see what the big names,,,, WM, Lowes, etc. ast for a pair. Scams, poor knock offs, or counterfeit items are everywhere these days. Caveat emptor.
It was new when I took the pic 4 years ago. Couldn't afford a big zero turn.
 
They are expensive, for a reason I guess. Had a very good job when I bought my 60" commercial. No way I could/would replace it now. Although, some of the lesser ones are still damn quick.
 
I had similar problems with Milwaukee batteries. Supposedly genuine and even a Milwaukee service center couldn't tell a difference but warranty was denied because wherever the service center sent the batteries decided they weren't genuine.
After that debacle, I've only bought batteries from Milwaukee stores or Home Depot.
 
It's possible for a power tool battery to be so dead that it will not charge. The reason is that if the charger doesn't detect any current at all, it doesn't know the battery is there, so it will not put out a charge....In other words, you'll have to use two jumper wires to momentarily connect the completely dead battery to a good battery for about 5 seconds or so. Once that is done, there should be enough current in the dead battery for the charger to read.....There's Youtube videos that depict how to do this if you need a visual.

I've rescued several batteries that had been discarded as junk by doing this.

DGW
 
^^^I tried that trick but didn't work. I'm guessing the knock offs didn't even HAVE batteries inside--just ballast to make them seem legit. :unsure:
I posted the information for those that might not have known it....But of course you are correct in that nothing works on a dummy battery which is not really a battery. It probably wouldn't work on a defective battery neither......
I just thought that it might be worth a try is all.

DGW
 
Amazon is loaded with scammers and faux products.
They just announced they will no longer ship 3rd party items from their warehouses. We will see if it helps.

I bought some Ryobi knockoffs from Temu. ( I know, I know) So far they are holding up well and recharging. We'll see how long they last.
 
Now I am extra curious as to what I will receive in my "re-order" of the $30 DeWalt 20v battery. I see on the Amazon site that some of the alleged DeWalt batteries are more in the $60 price range, but that just might mean losing more money on those than others if they do not work. Amazon is really good about returns and crediting me for the bad item, so you would think that Amazon itself would try to avoid carrying counterfeit goods. I expect the new battery to be delivered by early next week.
 
Some may be actual DeWalt batteries but are rebuilt and not new. Always beware of third-party venders, especially if it is a pawn shop.
 
You have to look close... same with Milwaukees .... I bought two off brand replacements years ago and you had to jiggle the batteries in the drill to get them to work... I sent them back... but here is the real issue with these cordless tools... these new lithium batteries have some kind of micro chip in them and I firmly believe that they are designed to die after a certain number of years... in the last 3 moths I've had 7 of my Milwaukees go bad on me... this is what happens.... you fully charged them then put them in the tool and after 30 seconds or a minutes while using the tool, say a drill, the tool starts acting funny and if it has a LED light on it that flashes and if you look at the charge lights on the battery they are all flashing saying there is a malfunction with the battery..... I just had to buy 6 new Milwaukee batteries for my work.... that ain't cheap.
 
I use mostly Ryobi at home, and have a source for discounted actual Ryobi batteries (Direct Tools Outlet) so haven't had any issues with those. But I have a couple of Milwaukee M12 tools I bought to use at work and tried a couple of the cheaper batteries from Amazon for those. These weren't marked as Milwaukee batteries, but were similar in appearance and were advertised as aftermarket replacements. The only thing I've noticed is that the drill seems to run just a little bit slower than with the actual Milwaukee batteries, but so far they take a decent charge and the run time is at least close to the originals. The price was about a third of the Milwaukee batteries, so as far as value is concerned, I'm pretty satisfied with them.
 
You have to look close... same with Milwaukees .... I bought two off brand replacements years ago and you had to jiggle the batteries in the drill to get them to work... I sent them back... but here is the real issue with these cordless tools... these new lithium batteries have some kind of micro chip in them and I firmly believe that they are designed to die after a certain number of years... in the last 3 moths I've had 7 of my Milwaukees go bad on me... this is what happens.... you fully charged them then put them in the tool and after 30 seconds or a minutes while using the tool, say a drill, the tool starts acting funny and if it has a LED light on it that flashes and if you look at the charge lights on the battery they are all flashing saying there is a malfunction with the battery..... I just had to buy 6 new Milwaukee batteries for my work.... that ain't cheap.
It is the number of charge/discharge cycles that determine the life.
 
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