My understanding and experience was that NiCads would discharge fairly fast just sitting there and I have definitely experienced that with some brand tools. But - the C12 doesn't do it. Don't know what Festool did to fix this - higher quality batteries built to their spec maybe? I have 2 of the C12s and have purchased 4 others for my electricians at work and they all hold charge extremely well and keep their power up to very near the end. I know many people look at the C12 and TDK and see the NiCads and won't consider them thinking that Festool is using very old technology. I actually would be hesitant to use a different battery technology with the Festools unless there is a significant weight savings with no power and function loss. My experience is that the C12 NiCads are every bit as good as my other tools utilizing NiMH and LiIon and in many ways better. Amazing power out of the 12 volt NiCads. You can get the NiMH in the 3.0Ah battery option for the C12 but it is quite a bit heavier - I have one. Bought it for outdoor jobs needing more run-time but have not found it needed so far.
So - what exactly did Festool do different than other companies with the NiCads? They need to explain this in the literature unless it is some secret.
Pete
So - what exactly did Festool do different than other companies with the NiCads? They need to explain this in the literature unless it is some secret.
Pete