Home Depot has
RYOBI ONE+ 18V HIGH PERFORMANCE Kit w/ (2) 4.0 Ah Batteries, 2.0 Ah Battery, Charger, & FREE Hybrid Tri-Power Tripod Light (PSK108SB-PCL691B) for
$199.
Shipping is free or select free store pickup where available.
Thanks to Community Member
mitsured for finding this deal.
Note: Availability for pickup may vary by location
About this item:
- Extend your productivity with up to 4X more runtime
- INTELLICELL battery technology features advanced electronics allowing batteries to last longer, think smarter and deliver up to 30% more power
- COOL-CORE design reduces temperature while in-use to optimize battery performance and extended battery life
- Advanced lithium cells maximize performance and runtime during demanding applications
- High visibility LED fuel gauge clearly indicates remaining runtime
- Easily snaps into place and detaches with quick-release buttons
- Pair with 18V ONE+ HP tools for optimized performance
- Recharge on any 18V ONE+ charger
- Hybrid Tri-Power Tripod Light: 3,800 lumens with 4 brightness modes (high, medium, low and single panel)
- Hybrid Tri-Power Tripod Light: 360° illumination with individual adjustable LED panels or use as a single panel flashlight
- Hybrid Tri-Power Tripod Light: Hands-free use with 2-by capable handle and integrated folding hanging hook
- Hybrid Tri-Power Tripod Light: Detachable 18V ONE+ 360° LED light for portable illumination
- Part of the RYOBI 18V ONE+ System of over 300 Cordless Products
- 3-year manufacturer's warranty
- Includes: (2) PBP004 18V ONE+ 4Ah Lithium HIGH PERFORMANCE Batteries, PBP003 18V ONE+ 2Ah Lithium HIGH PERFORMANCE Battery, PCG002 18V ONE+ Charger, and Operator's Manual
- Includes: PCL691B TriPOWER Tripod, 18V ONE+ 360° LED Light and operator's manuals
59 Comments
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BUT can I use this to connect my 40v battery to a 18v inverter? Currently my 40v batteries just act as usb chargers in a power outage… would be nice to hook them to the 150w inverter I already have.
Amp output is dependent on load, and tools are designed to operate at the given voltage.
Where this does matter is in high draw tools. When a battery is heavily drawn on its voltage drops under load, so your 18v drops to 17v. High amp batteries are able to share this draw across the extra cells and minimize its drop… 17.5v.
So yes a 4ah outperforms a 2ah and a 9ah out performs both.(this is a case of diminishing returns so 9ah barely out perform 4ah).
Extra terminals have been shown to be communication terminals and have been discontinued on newer HP tools. More cells or better cells of HP allows the tool to draw more from the normal terminals without impacting voltage significantly or damaging the cells. So the HP tool is just allowed to more fully use the normal terminals.
Your explanation of "outperform" is flawed, if not disingenuous, for the sake of this topic.
In the case of Ryobi, no, a higher amperage battery does not change the performance of the tool beyond runtime, given equal compositions and battery "class". Certain tools in the HP and HP+ line can utilize variable voltage and amperage for additional performance when used with HP batteries, but it isn't universal across the board.
And it certainly doesn't apply to battery adapters.
As for the third tab being phased out, that's news to me. All of my HP+ tools have it.
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Maybe @ MSRP. I've gotten 2x4Ah 18 V for $37 @ depot.
The other big difference is that this light is removable to give you other possibilities.
I've seen a couple youtube videos where they test a standard 4ah vs. HP 4ah on a HP impact tool and get no real difference. The larger 6ah and 9ah batteries do perform better in testing.
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Is there any good 40V kit currently on sale? I wouldn't mind getting into their 40V platform.