If a Craftsman V20 pack won’t take a charge, check the charger lights, battery temperature, contacts, and age before replacing the pack.
When a cordless tool pack refuses to wake up, you want quick, safe answers. This guide gives you the exact checks, what each charger light means, how to deal with hot/cold packs, simple cleaning steps, and when to retire a pack. You’ll also see clear tables, pass/fail tests, and safety notes so you can get back to work with confidence.
Quick Triage: Read The Lights, Feel The Pack, Try Again
Start simple. Seat the pack on the charger until it clicks. Watch the LED. Feel the pack. Give it a few minutes on the bench if it came straight from use or a cold car. Many “dead” packs wake up as temperature normalizes.
Charger Light Codes And What To Do
The V20 charger uses a small set of light patterns that map to clear actions. Use the table below as your first checkpoint.
| Indicator | Meaning | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Blinking Green | Normal charging in progress | Leave in place until the light turns solid |
| Solid Green | Charge complete | Remove and test in a tool |
| Red Solid + Green Blinking | Hot/Cold delay (pack outside safe range) | Let the pack reach room temperature; charging resumes on its own |
| No Lights | No power, failed charger, or pack not detected | Check outlet, reseat the pack, try another battery or charger if available |
| Solid Red Only | Fault indicator on some models | Remove the pack, inspect contacts, try a second charge cycle |
That “hot/cold delay” pattern is normal protection. When the pack reaches a safe range, the red light drops out and charging continues. A cold pack often charges slowly at first, then ramps up once warm.
When A Craftsman V20 Pack Fails To Charge: Five Simple Wins
1) Bring The Pack To Room Temperature
Lithium cells accept charge best at moderate temps. If the pack came from a hot shed or a freezing truck bed, park it indoors for 20–30 minutes, then try again. A charger that blinked red/green should flip to green-only once the pack is back in range.
2) Reseat, Then Swap To Cross-Check
Slide the pack off and on with a firm click. Try another outlet. If you own a second pack, place it on the same charger. If that pack charges, your suspect pack is the problem. If neither charges, the charger or outlet is the likely culprit.
3) Clean The Contacts
Oxidation and dust cut current. Use a dry microfiber or a pencil eraser on the pack’s metal blades. Avoid sprays. Make sure the charger slots are clean too. Reseat and check the light again.
4) Give It A Short Recovery Window
A pack that tripped protection from a deep drain sometimes needs a quiet pause. Remove it from the tool, let it sit a few minutes, then dock it again. Watch for a switch from no-light to blinking green.
5) Try A Second Charger If You Can
Borrow one or take the pack to a store that can test it. If your pack charges on a different unit, you’ve found the issue without guesswork.
Safety First: Heat, Cold, And “Wake-Up” Myths
Charge Only In A Moderate Range
Charging when the pack is freezing or overheated can harm the cells and shorten life. Many chargers delay on purpose until the pack warms or cools. If you rushed the pack from a winter truck to a charger, warm it slowly indoors, then try again. Avoid space heaters and direct sun.
Skip Risky Revival Tricks
You might see advice to “jump” a pack with wires or a bench supply. That bypasses built-in protection and can end badly. If the pack won’t wake with normal methods, retire it responsibly.
Stop Using Swollen, Hissing, Or Burn-Marked Packs
Any sign of swelling, smoke, burnt odor, or melting plastic is a hard stop. Move the pack away from combustibles, let it cool in a safe area, and send it for proper recycling. Don’t toss it in household trash.
Deeper Checks: Simple Measurements Without Guesswork
If you own a multimeter and know basic DC checks, you can learn more without opening the pack. Keep probes clear of each other, and never pry into the case.
Open-Circuit Voltage (OCV) Snapshot
Set the meter to DC volts. Touch probes to the pack terminals. A healthy V20 pack that’s at rest usually reads well above 15V when not empty. A reading near zero suggests the protection circuit is open or the pack is depleted beyond the charger’s start threshold.
Under-Load Sanity Check
If the pack wakes on the charger but a tool stalls instantly, the cells may be tired. Try a low-draw tool such as a flashlight or inflator. If it blinks out, the pack is near end of life even if it still accepts some charge.
Care Habits That Prevent The Next “Won’t Charge” Moment
Don’t Store Empty
After a long session, give the pack a brief top-up. Parking it bone-dry for weeks invites deep discharge. A short charge before storage keeps the BMS happy.
Park It Indoors
Keep packs off concrete floors in damp sheds and away from car dashboards. A closet shelf at home is perfect. Aim for cool, dry, indoor conditions.
Rotate Packs
If you own two or more, alternate them. Rotation spreads wear and reduces the chance that one pack ages out early.
Match The Charger To The System
Use the correct Craftsman charger for V20 packs. Mix-and-match with unrelated tool brands can lead to no-charge or fault lights.
What The Warranty And Age Mean For You
Rechargeable packs are consumables. After many cycles, capacity falls and internal resistance rises. If your pack is old, won’t hold energy, and throws a fault on multiple chargers, replacement is often the best path. Check purchase records for any remaining coverage.
Step-By-Step Fix Flow You Can Follow
- Let the pack rest at room temp for 20–30 minutes.
- Reseat the pack; confirm a solid click.
- Watch the LED pattern for one full minute.
- Clean the contacts; try again.
- Swap outlets; avoid power strips.
- Cross-check with a second pack or charger.
- Run the OCV snapshot if you have a meter.
- If swelling, smoke, or heat shows up, stop and recycle.
Reference Table: Simple Tests, Pass Ranges, Next Steps
| Test | Pass Range | Next Step If It Fails |
|---|---|---|
| LED Pattern | Blinking green → solid green | See hot/cold delay; reseat; try a second charger |
| Pack Temperature | Feels room-temp to the touch | Warm or cool indoors; avoid heaters and sun |
| OCV Snapshot | Well above 15V when at rest | Near zero suggests deep discharge; retire if it won’t wake safely |
| Tool Spin | Low-draw tool runs steady | Instant stall points to aged cells; plan to replace |
| Cross-Check | Other pack charges on your charger | If none charge, suspect the charger or outlet |
When To Replace, When To Recycle
Retire a pack that stays in fault on more than one charger, swells, smokes, or smells burnt. Don’t open the case or try cell swaps. Take it to a battery collection point or a hardware store drop-off bin. Tape the terminals before transport.
Pro Tips For Longer Life
Keep Sessions Short Near Empty
Once the tool surges and fades, swap packs. Pushing past that point forces the BMS to cut off at a deep level, which can trigger the next no-charge episode.
Charge After Work, Not During Heat Spikes
Charge in the evening or indoors where the temperature is steady. Summer garages and winter tailgates are common traps.
Label Your Packs
Write the purchase month on masking tape. When a mystery fault shows up, age is no longer a guess.
FAQ-Style Clarity Without The Fluff
What Does Red With Blinking Green Mean?
That’s a temperature hold. The charger pauses until the pack warms or cools into range, then resumes automatically.
Should I “Jump” The Pack With Wires?
No. Bypassing the protection circuit risks fire. If a normal charge won’t start after the steps above, replace the pack and recycle the old one.
Can A Brand-New Pack Be Bad?
It’s rare, but possible. Test it on a second charger, then contact support with your receipt if it still refuses to charge.
Final Checklist Before You Buy A Replacement
- Room-temperature attempt completed
- Contacts cleaned and reseated
- Second outlet or charger tried
- LED codes observed for at least a minute
- No signs of swelling, smoke, or burnt odor
- Drop-off plan ready for recycling
Responsible Disposal In One Line
Don’t toss lithium packs in household bins; use a certified drop-off or a store program that handles tool batteries.
