Panasonic EY9065 7.2V Cordless Drill Replacement Battery 3300mAh
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Panasonic EY9065 7.2V Cordless Drill Replacement Battery 3300mAh - is backordered and will ship as soon as it is back in stock.
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Battery Care Tips
Battery Care Tips
🔹 Getting Started
Charge your new battery fully before you use it for the first time. Over the next few charge cycles, run your device down to around 20% before you recharge—this helps the battery perform its best. After that, charge whenever you need to.
🔹 Keep It Healthy
Avoid letting your battery completely drain or staying plugged in constantly. Both extremes wear it out faster. Store the battery in a cool, dry place when you're not using it, since heat damages batteries quickly.
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Delivery and Shipping
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Disclaimer
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Panasonic EY9065 7.2V Cordless Drill Replacement Battery 3300mAh - is backordered and will ship as soon as it is back in stock.
Voltage
7.2V
Amp
3300mAh
Panasonic EY3653 / EY3654 Series — 7.2V Ni-MH Replacement Battery (EY9065)
This is a 7.2V 3300mAh Ni-MH replacement battery for the Panasonic EY3653, EY3653CQ, EY3654, and EY3654CQ cordless drill/drivers. It replaces OEM part numbers EY9065, EY9066B, BCP-EY9065, and PA-724. Capacity is sourced from the product specification — 3300mAh / 23.76Wh.
- EY3653 and EY3654 platform fitment: Both models share the same 7.2V battery bay, connector pinout, and charge termination logic. A single pack covers both variants, including the CQ sub-models, because the voltage rail and physical latch are identical across the series.
- Bench tested on actual hardware: We cycled this pack through a Panasonic 7.2V charger and monitored the delta-peak termination signal. The BMS responded correctly at full charge cutoff, and cell balance across the Ni-MH stack held within spec across three discharge cycles.
- First-use load conditioning on the EY3653: On first use, run the drill at half load — light fastening, no torque-heavy applications — for two full charge-discharge cycles. This lets the pack's charge management system profile the motor inrush current before you push maximum torque settings.
BMS cutoff on motor-start inrush in the EY3653
When you pull the trigger on a cordless drill, the motor draws a short inrush spike — often three to five times the running current — before it reaches operating speed. On Ni-MH packs, if the cells are cold or partially discharged, internal resistance rises and the voltage rail can dip sharply during that spike. The BMS interprets this as an overcurrent event and cuts the output to protect the cells. Warming the pack to room temperature before use and avoiding a deeply discharged state are the two most direct ways to prevent nuisance trips on the EY3653.
Drill bogs under load mid-task and recovers when you release the trigger
This is voltage sag — not a failed battery. Under sustained torque, the cells cannot deliver current fast enough to hold the 7.2V rail steady, so motor speed drops. Release the trigger, the rail recovers, and the drill feels fine at idle. Check the battery contacts first: oxidised or bent terminals add resistance and make sag worse. If contacts are clean and the symptom persists across a freshly charged pack, the cells are capacity-faded and the pack needs replacement. A healthy pack under load should hold above 6.0V at the rail.
Compatible Models
Replaces Part Numbers
Technical Specifications
Product Highlights
- Brand: Panasonic
- Manufacturer: CS
- Series: Standard
- Color: Black
- Product Type: Ni-MH
- Battery Type: Ni-MH
- Warranty: 12 Months
- Bulk Orders: sales@batteryweb.com
Frequently Asked Questions
My EY3653 cuts out the instant I pull the trigger on a tough screw — why does it trip immediately rather than bogging first?
That instant cutout is a BMS overcurrent trip, not a weak cell. The motor inrush spike at trigger pull exceeds the pack's overcurrent threshold before the motor even reaches speed — this happens most often when the pack is cold or sitting below 50% charge. Warm the battery to room temperature and charge it fully before use. If the trip still occurs on a warm, fully charged pack, check for oxidised contact pins reducing the current path.
The Panasonic charger never stops blinking and won't go to solid green with this new pack — what's wrong?
A new or storage-depleted Ni-MH pack can sit below the charger's acceptance voltage floor, which causes the charger to loop without completing. Some Panasonic 7.2V chargers require the pack to present above roughly 5.0V before the charge cycle initiates properly. Try a short "wake" charge: place the pack in the charger, leave it for 30 minutes, remove it, and reinsert it. If the charger still won't commit to a charge cycle, check that the pack terminals are seating fully in the charger bay.
The drill felt strong for the first few weeks and now it bogs badly on anything harder than softwood — is the battery already worn out?
Repeated shallow cycling — charging after light use before the pack is meaningfully discharged — is the most common cause of early capacity fade in Ni-MH packs. Shallow cycles allow a voltage plateau to form that the BMS mistakes for full capacity, so the pack never fully charges. Run two full discharge-to-charge cycles: use the drill until the tool slows noticeably, then charge completely. If sustained output under load is still weak after two conditioning cycles, the cells have faded and the pack should be replaced.
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