DeWalt to Makita battery adapter

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Hi all,
Looking for advice. I have several 18V NiCd Makita tools with ageing batteries and want to power them using a DeWalt 18v Li ion battery. I have looked for adapters but they all seem to power DeWalt tools from Makita batteries, or only power 12 / 14V Makita tools.

Do any readers use battery adapters and if so, are they reliable/ worth the bother?
Does anyone have a link to the particular type of adapter I need?

Thanks in advance,

K
 
Can you post a picture of the NiCad Makita battery you have so we can see what the tool end of the adaptor would need to look like.

NiCad technology is old, and even adapting from Makita Li ion to Makita NiCad is expecting a lot, let alone going from a different manufacturer to an obsolete format. How many of those would a person sell in a year? The only off-the-shelf solution you might find in this direction is a 3D printed one, so look on Etsy or Thingiverse etc.

You can buy something that clips onto the DeWalt battery onto which you can then graft an empty Makita NiCad battery to make an adaptor if you are sufficiently desperate. You retain the shell and clips of the Makita item and discard the innards. Most have a flat base, so joining the two parts is not so difficult.

https://www.aliexpress.com/item/1005006047153708.html

Be wary about running the tool for too long in this manner. Normally, when the battery is tired, it will signal to the tool that it wants to shut off (that is why most Li ion batteries have three connections) and the tool obeys that command and draws no more power from the battery. In your setup, the tool would not have that circuitry and will continue to drain the battery until it is over-discharged. Then you will have great difficulty recharging it on a standard charger. Summary: be careful lest you screw up your DeWalt batteries.

Edit: this goes Makita Li ion to Makita NiCad, so keeping the top of it, sanding off the bottom of it and then sellotaping to the AliWalt above would do the trick

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Ecarke-Battery-Converter-Cordless-Compatible/dp/B08S6Y41SB

After writing all above, the item you want actually does exist (note to self: never believe someone who states they have looked):

https://powertoolsadapters.uk/products/dewalt-20v-to-makita-18v-nicad-battery-adapter
 
Last edited:
Can you post a picture of the NiCad Makita battery you have so we can see what the tool end of the adaptor would need to look like.

NiCad technology is old, and even adapting from Makita Li ion to Makita NiCad is expecting a lot, let alone going from a different manufacturer to an obsolete format. How many of those would a person sell in a year? The only off-the-shelf solution you might find in this direction is a 3D printed one, so look on Etsy or Thingiverse etc.

You can buy something that clips onto the DeWalt battery onto which you can then graft an empty Makita NiCad battery to make an adaptor if you are sufficiently desperate. You retain the shell and clips of the Makita item and discard the innards. Most have a flat base, so joining the two parts is not so difficult.

https://www.aliexpress.com/item/1005006047153708.html

Be wary about running the tool for too long in this manner. Normally, when the battery is tired, it will signal to the tool that it wants to shut off (that is why most Li ion batteries have three connections) and the tool obeys that command and draws no more power from the battery. In your setup, the tool would not have that circuitry and will continue to drain the battery until it is over-discharged. Then you will have great difficulty recharging it on a standard charger. Summary: be careful lest you screw up your DeWalt batteries.

Edit: this goes Makita Li ion to Makita NiCad, so keeping the top of it, sanding off the bottom of it and then sellotaping to the AliWalt above would do the trick

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Ecarke-Battery-Converter-Cordless-Compatible/dp/B08S6Y41SB

After writing all above, the item you want actually does exist (note to self: never believe someone who states they have looked):

https://powertoolsadapters.uk/products/dewalt-20v-to-makita-18v-nicad-battery-adapter
 
as chai latte says the dewalt batteries have no over discharge protection, relying on circuitry in the tool to protect the battery. you'd need to do your research but I believe makita batteries have protection built in, and I think that the same is true of the parkside batteries at lidl, so that might offer a more budget friendly solution
 
That's the one I have been looking for. Thank you haiLatte. I now need to decide if this is a wise step to take. The thing is, I have a Makita NiCd impact driver and a sabre saw, and really don't want to have to buy replacement tools if I can avoid it.

K

Edit - perhaps I will just go for replacement Makita NiCd copies, although I have read some of these fail early. Problems problems.
 
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