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Cordless Power Tool Battle Royal

Which brand(s) would you recommend?

  • Bosch

    Votes: 6 8.8%
  • Makita

    Votes: 15 22.1%
  • DEWALT

    Votes: 19 27.9%
  • Rigid

    Votes: 5 7.4%
  • Roybi

    Votes: 10 14.7%
  • Milwaukee

    Votes: 30 44.1%
  • Porter-Cable

    Votes: 3 4.4%

  • Total voters
    68
Tools

Mt ryobi tools have treated me well, great for around the house do it yourselfer, and great price point
 
I love Ryobi and Rigid for home stuff and have used Bosch, Dewalt, Porter-Cable, Milwaukee and Makita at work. Makita and PC held up the best, then maybe Bosch and Milwaukee tied close second, but the Dewalt never impressed long term.
 
I bought a Milwaukee cordless hammer drill for drilling into concrete and it was okay but died after a year. It was replaced with an 18V Hilti TE4 which cost less than the Milwaukee, did a better job of drilling and lasted the rest of the project.
Next project bought another Hilti for the crew and it lasted 4 years of regular use.
We buy mostly Hilti for heavy duty use but will go with Bosh when wanting to save a buck. Drills have a tendency of walking off the job.
 
I have some Makita stuff, a Dewalt drill and have used other brands. What I have the most of are the Milwaukee M12 tools for lighter household projects. They make short work of things I would not bother to get out a bigger tool for.
 
I have a Milwaukee m12 1/4" impact that I use the ever loving shit out of. Thing's been running strong for over a year.
 
tarted almst 40 years ago with Makita

$/quality changes over time. Started almost 40 years ago with Makita. Switched to DeWalt. These days it's PorterCable. I like the smaller size/weight, easier to carry from site to site.

If I was "building my shop" in one location I'd go with mostly corded and only use a battery driven for smaller, tricky, 'have to work from the inside, kind of stuff. It depends on what kind of work you do, build vs repair - wood vs metal, etc.

For certain specialty work Fein makes some good stuff that can be worth the investment in capability and time savings.

.
 
Umm...

Are you sure? That sounds too good to be true. I have $200+ worth of batteries that will be toast before the end of the year ( i use them constantly). They will lose their ass on me alone.
Probably true, i have the kobalt brand 24v stuff for a few years niw and the replacement batteries are $20 and often $10.

I like them, but i don't use them professionally and haven't compared them to other brands in person for the same job so couldn't say how they compare.

Only 24v setup when i started buying and cheap batteries is why i chose them

*edit, 24v not 20v
 
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I was green for many years, went yellow for a few and am now strictly red.
 
AvE is funny. I'd like to have a beer with him but Canadian beer is gross.
You'll probably.like Bad Obsession motorsports "project binky" if you've not found it already.

Thanks for the tip - I just looked at episode 1. Love that frame jig. :thumbup
 
Probably true, i have the kobalt brand 20v stuff for a few years niw and the replacement batteries are $20 and often $10.

I like them, but i don't use them professionally and haven't compared them to other brands in person for the same job so couldn't say how they compare.

Only 20v setup when i started buying and cheap batteries is why i chose them

20V devices are a scam, and are not allowed to be marketed as such in Europe and most other places.

https://www.protoolreviews.com/news/20v-max-vs-18v-battery-power/17024/

https://www.coptool.com/power-tool-voltages-still-confusing-pros-is-20v-max-more-powerful-than-18v/
 
After fifty years in construction:
Milwaukee for almost anything.
Hilti for heavy duty impact and guns
Makita
and for home use, Ryobi and DeWalt

I have Milwaukee tools that are forty years old.
 
timely thread,as I'm in the market for cordless angle grinder. but whats with the bare tool(a la carte),enlighten me pls.....
 
timely thread,as I'm in the market for cordless angle grinder. but whats with the bare tool(a la carte),enlighten me pls.....

I think that most people don't use a tool like the angle grinder as an entry point into a "system" (if only there was a battery standard...).

You'll find promos on the combo kits which usually start with a drill and impact in a kit which includes the charger and 1-2 batteries. Most then start adding the accessory tools since they're hooked into the system.

If you're after a-la-carte, you can get the battery/charger bundles like so.
 
^thanks for the link/info. current cordless tools i own is craftsmen, just wanna try a different brand for a change. probably leaning towards a makita at this point...
 
^thanks for the link/info. current cordless tools i own is craftsmen, just wanna try a different brand for a change. probably leaning towards a makita at this point...

Unless you plan on using it daily, just go with Ryobi. They have screaming deals and their tools are quite high quality. Makita is better, but I still have all the Ryobi tools I have bought over the last 15 years and they still work.

They make a "Dustbuster" small hand vacuum. It costs maybe $50. It is far better quality and longer lasting than any of the $100 hand vacs I have bought. ( And uses the same 18v battery all my other tools use.)
 
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Unless you plan on using it daily, just go with Ryobi. They have screaming deals and their tools are quite high quality. Makita is better, but I still have all the Ryobi tools I have bought over the last 15 years and they still work.
i've been on ebay all morning,is mostly Milwaukee,then makita. i'll edit my search now....
 
timely thread,as I'm in the market for cordless angle grinder. but whats with the bare tool(a la carte),enlighten me pls.....
I went DeWalt many years ago when I got a six tool set on a super deal. The grinder is very good, as is the reciprocal saw, etc.. They make their money on the batteries. (The right-angle drill driver is a terrible design. You hold it over the motor with no insulation. OUCH!)

I have gone Ryobi with my newer yard tools. But, they are smokers. And as good as more expensive stuff, for sure, as afm199 points out. I have a McCulloch chainsaw that is over thirty years old and still kicks butt. I am terrified it will go south.
 
Damn this thread. My 3/8” Snap-On impact died yesterday right after I posted. Fixing it will cost probably over $100. A new one without battery will cost probably $300.

Orrrrrrr...I can buy this setup on Amazon for like $329.
800x450-IRproducts.jpg


More power than Snap-On, the flashlight is way nicer, and better used this tool at the IR booth at the SEMA show last year and was super impressed with it.
 
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