Ryobi 18V ONE+ 4.0Ah Triple Battery Kit $229 Delivered ($0 C&C/ in-Store) + More Kits @ Bunnings

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Also available is a 2 x 4.0AH and charger kit for $169 https://www.bunnings.com.au/ryobi-18v-one-4ah-twin-battery-s…

These are promo items and listed as limited time only on the Ryobi website. Considering a single 4.0Ah is $149, you are getting these batteries at near 1/2 price.

Plenty of stock of both kits with not many stores with nil stock.

Triple 4.0AH kit. https://nrby.in/bunnings/0740515

Twin 4.0AH and charger kit. https://nrby.in/bunnings/0740513

Couple of other promo kits available. Ryobi 18V ONE+ Inflator / Deflator 2Ah Kit at $149. The inflator on its own is $125.
https://www.bunnings.com.au/ryobi-18v-one-inflator-deflator-…

Again, plenty of stock around with only a few stores nil stock. https://nrby.in/bunnings/0740506

Ryobi 18V ONE+ Reciprocating Saw 2Ah Kit $129, Saw on its own is $99 https://www.bunnings.com.au/ryobi-18v-one-reciprocating-saw-…

Plenty of stock on this as well. https://nrby.in/bunnings/0774140

For the inevitable Bunnings website weirdness try this link and scroll down a bit. https://www.bunnings.com.au/search/products?page=1&q=Ryobi+1…

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Comments

  • I've been eyeing this one off, but have been waiting for another ryobi battery trade in promo. I havent seen one in ages, does anyone know if they're still a thing?

    • Best I can recall they have only had a couple of those deals on Ryobi batteries. One later last year and another about a year before that. You might be waiting for a while:)

    • Best to keep your eye out at EOFY / Father’s day. Only time you’d usually see this, and usually for Dewalt.

      Good luck

  • +1

    recip saw looks alright

    is it worth it to instead save up for the brushless instead?

    • +2

      Typically brushless tools are around 10% to 15% more powerful than their brushed equivalent and can use a bit less power. So is it worth the extra cost? Only you can decide that.

      I have plenty of brushed tools and they do the job just fine, and they last. Some of mine are coming up on 9-10 years old and work perfectly.

      • +1

        Brushless is so expensive imo. I wouldn't bother.

    • +1

      I have the Ryobi brushless, HP recip saw. Hasn't missed a beat since I got it. The included blade is absolute rubbish though, so have to factor in additional cost of blades.

      • +1

        Yeah already came to peace with buying consumables prob get some Diablo ones or whatever

        • +1

          My preference is Milwaukee recipro blades. I have some that are years old and still going strong. Not silly expensive either (at least not when I bought them, lol) and available in nearly all tool shops.

  • +2

    They are the 'old' style lithium batteries (but new style looking outside) but not the new tabless design called 'Edge', which is more efficient (but these work out to one third the cost)

    • +1

      Saw the 4.0AH Edge on Bunnings last week at $189 each. I think I will pass on them, lol.

  • Got the charger and two batteries

  • +3

    I don't understand the point of the "edge" batteries. Looking at the RB1840E, they claim "delivering up to 160% more power and twice the runtime*. This EDGE Battery has one of the best power-to-weight ratios of any ONE+ model currently available**." But that's just in comparison to the RB1820C, like yeah, that one's half the capacity, of course it is more powerful and lasts longer. Just so scummy to not compare it to the RB1840C.

    • +2

      Yeah that marketing is a bit BS. Saw they used the same comparison in the USA blurb too.

      Here is a link to some tests in a review. It is definitely capable of putting out more current than tabbed cell batteries when pushed hard in high draw brushless tools. I guess the prices will eventually come down as the tech becomes standard.

      https://www.protoolreviews.com/ryobi-18v-high-performance-ed…

    • +9

      Using figures provided in that review for these batteries:

      6 1/2-inch HP Brushless Compact Circular Saw Cutting 2 Sheets of Stacked 3/4-inch OSB:

      • 4Ah: 19.4 sec
      • 4Ah High Performance: 16.2 sec
      • 8Ah High Performance: 12.5 sec
      • 4Ah High Performance Edge: 12.0 sec

      So 4Ah high performance edge vs 4Ah high performance, 26% more power output. P = IV and since V is the same, basically edge batteries allow higher maximum current.

      • +1

        P=VI jogged some memories. Good old uni days

    • I think tool batteries are definitely at the point where marketing is doing the heavy lifting. Just little increments, and the change of a colour or maybe some more BLACK for professional spec lmfao.

  • Thanks OP, picked up the twin battery kit

  • +1

    Is it over? Link says can't find item?

  • -4

    Each $76.33. Not a good deal, not even a deal.

    • For the record I didn't neg you, but at half price they are a pretty good deal.

    • +1

      what would be a good deal? looking for my first set

      • -1

        <45 each is a good deal. $45-50 deal. >50 is not a deal.
        I am not going to reply to OP above and I do not care about negs.

        • You care enough to mention them ;)

          • @WhyAmICommenting: For the wrong user but name checks out ;)

          • -2

            @WhyAmICommenting: Dudes, I really do not care your negs, yourselves, your mentions. I am sure you will find something to twist this, too.

        • Ahh, so just some figure you pulled out of your bum

  • Can anyone comment on the cheap ebay/AliExpress knock offs? Would love to know if they are worth considering

    • -1

      I just bought 2 of these recently: https://www.ebay.com.au/itm/156149177526?var=456968344495 (note: These are 5Ah)
      Can't comment on how good they are as I've only used 1 battery once. They fit perfectly. Build quality is good. Time will tell.
      At the time, they were 1/3 the price of the original.

      • +1

        Their weight compared to a genuine battery would be an interesting comparison. Should not be significantly lighter than the equivalent genuine battery if the Ah claims are correct.

        • Bingo, I bought an "8ah" battery from one of these ebay sellers then I weighed it on a scale VS an official 4ah battery and it was lighter. Then I plugged both into a workshop light and the 8ah battery did about half the duration of a 2yo 4ah battery.

      • +1

        I was talking to the bunnings ryobi rep and he claimed that the difference between the cheap Chinese batteries and the official ryobi ones is to do with the computer chip in the battery itself.

        He said some tool brands put the 'smarts' in the tool (makita (?)), but ryobi put the 'smarts' in the battery. I think it has to do with things like the 'HP' bit, which if you notice on the HP tools and batteries, is slightly different at the attachment point (see the little metal rectangle).

        He said that there was a guy wanting to return his broken ryobi mower with a cheap chinese battery still in it (facepalm!) - ryobi/bunnings told him it voided the warranty (or something to that effect).

        • Yeah this is it.
          I had some of the knock offs and they were fine until they ran down too low. There’s no minimum voltage limit and couldn’t get them reset by any of the methods I tried. Had to chuck them.

    • Had some for a few years now, no issues.

    • I bought two 5AH batteries from aubattery for $103.50 and they work great. Actually not sure if it was intentional or not, but they sent me two 8ah units.

    • I did some research on this and purchased these from eBay 1 year ago (2 for $73.93).
      I use them only in my leaf blower. No degradation of capacity during 1 year of use. Work fine in the Ryobi charger.

      They're not really like 8Ah - I'd say they last nearly as long as the original 5Ah Ryobi one did, so maybe best compared with a 4Ah battery. But they're perfectly fit for the job, and I paid $63.93 for 2 at the time, using a $5 eBay coupon. Dunno about "smarts" in the battery, but it's a bloody leaf blower…..

      Before buying these aftermarket ones, I was on the 2nd 5Ah Ryobi battery. I seem to get 2.5 years out of them, using it maybe 20 times a year. Not good enough given the price.

  • Triple kit can no longer be found even going via Ryobi site?

    • Just checked again and all the links work for me.

  • +2

    I am not buying any expensive bulky Ryobi batteries any more, my adapter with my Ozito cheap and lighter batteries is a game changer.

    • There’s an adapter to use Ozito batteries!?

    • details please

  • Anyone know the flow rate of the inflator?

    • Took some searching but finally found the spec via a USA site, then converted it from the stone age to metric.

      High pressure side (0.45 CFM) 13L per minute at (35PSI) 240 KPA.

      Low pressure side (8.5CFM) 240 litres per minute.

      Pretty much standard for these type of inflators.

  • Are 6Ah batteries discontinued?

    Would be looking at one of those for my grass trimmer. 4Ah runs out for a typical mow.

    • Not sure, but you can still get one in a kit with a charger if that helps.

      It's $199. Can't post a direct link to Bunnings as it will be deleted as spam, but can be found here https://www.ryobi.com.au/products/starter-kits/18v-one-hptm-… Just click on where to buy.

      Charger probably worth $40-$50 ish on FB or Gumtree if you don't need it.

  • Damn I gave up on Ryobi cheap battery deal and got the aldi lawn mower.

  • +1

    Waiting for the Ryobi torch/lantern kit to make a return

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