Battery Charger Instruction Manual – October 2010
2
Table of Contents
1) Warnings and Cautions
page 5
2) Single Charger Instructions
page 8
3) Multiple Charger Instructions
page 10
4)
Troubleshooting
page
11
5) Replacement parts and Service
page 12
©2010 MAGNETEK MATERIAL HANDLING
All rights reserved. This notice applies to all copyrighted
materials included with this product, including, but not limited to,
this manual and software embodied within the product. This
manual is intended for the sole use of the persons to whom it
was provided, and any unauthorized distribution of the manual or
dispersal of its contents is strictly forbidden. This manual may not
be reproduced in whole or in part by any means whatsoever
without the expressed written permission of MAGNETEK.
Battery Charger Instruction Manual – October 2010
11
4) Troubleshooting
Problem
Possible
Reasons
Suggestions
Status LED
flashes Red
Batteries
too hot/cold
A battery must be from 50-104ºF (10-40ºC) to
charge. Charging will resume when the battery
gets back to its specified temperature range.
Wrong
battery type
If the wrong type of battery is placed in the
charger, it will not charge. Make sure the correct
battery type is used.
ONLY USE BATTERIES
PROVIDED BY MAGNETEK!
Battery
contacts
are dirty or
damaged
Inspect battery contacts. If dirty, wipe with
Isopropyl alcohol.
DO NOT SUBMERGE
. If
damaged, replace battery pack.
Battery has
not
indicated
full charge
in allotted
time
Various environmental conditions may elicit the
charger to fail to recognize a full charge condition.
In this case, the charger will stop charging after a
pre-programmed time and indicate a fault. If this
happens repeatedly contact, Magnetek Inc. as the
charger may require service.
Charger too
hot/cold
Re-locate charger to an environment that does not
exceed 50-104ºF (10-40ºC).
Table 1.0
Conditioning:
A new rechargeable battery pack may experience a
low usable capacity during the first few charge cycles due to long
storage. This is normal. Battery capacity will be restored after
several full charge/discharge cycles.