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The DC011 Worksite Radio/Charger is a great addition to the tools professionals love. Listen to the radio, CDs, or digital music from your phone or MP3 player. DEWALT®'s cordless worksite radio has great reception, is weather resistant, and runs off of 7.2V to 18V DEWALT® batteries that take an hour to charge.
The DC011 Worksite Radio/Charger is a great addition to the tools professionals love. Listen to the radio, CDs, or digital music from your phone or MP3 player.
The 735 draws 15 amps, which is the rating of typical lighting circuits in homes. The receptical in the wall is sometimes 15 amps although those circuits usually have 20 amp breakers. Since you said "fuse", it might be a bad fuse or even the wiring between the two. Circuit breakers go bad also. If you can confirm the receptical supplies voltage, it is time to check the 735.
Unknown if the device has a termal switch inside. I doubt it would go bad, but you implied a resting period allowed it to run several more times after the fuse in the basement was replaced. If it reset once, it should do it again. If you can find a diagram, there might be a fuse inside, but someone would have to take it apart to check.
A motor can get so hot that a solder joint inside can let loose and it will never run again. Sometimes the coil (windings of the motor) can short out (melt together) and this will increase how much current goes through it and also generate more heat and melt more windings together. Besides producing a smell, your house fuse would burn out real quick.
I had a chuckle over your 2nd sentence but I dare not say why. If it started after you came out (of the house), why did you not run it for a longer time?
A motor requires more power at the instant of turn on. 15 amps of running current will require 20 amps or more when starting. "slow blow" fuses (vs quick action) and circuit breakers can deal with the short period over current requirements.
This is what dewalt is saying...The Dewalt 12V/20V MAX work-site charger/radio functions as an AM/FM radio and recharges your 12V/20V Dewalt batteries (batteries not included). The 3-stage charger can recharge your batteries in as little as 1 hour, and the radio can run off 12V/20V batteries for cordless operation
2 AC power outlets offer more versatility for jobsite power
Auxillary & USB ports allows for connection to CD, MP3, portable satellite receivers, and other digital audio devices.
USB port allows device to be charged via USB when radio is plugged into a wall outlet
Class D amplifier, woofers and tweeters provide full range of high and low sound for optimum sound quality,( hope this helps)
Place the radio near a window that is not blocked by neighboring buildings. For AM rotate the radio to find the best reception.
For FM, deploy the telescopic antenna.
You may try to get special antennas.
It does not work at all or reception is bad? The radio has a ferrite bar antenna inside. Tune in to the frequency of the station you want and rotate the radio slowly to find the orientation for best reception. You may also try to hook an external AM antenna to the radio.
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