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Cordless Drills Again |
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10-22-2009, 02:38 AM
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#1 (permalink)
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Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Star, Idaho
Posts: 44
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Cordless Drills Again
Did a search here and newest info I could find was 3 years old.
People were happy with Millwaukee, Panasonic and Rigid.
I now have 2 Makita 14.4V drills that are getting tired. Replaced batterys once, brushes look good. But just dont do the job. They are about 12 and 15 years old.
Guess I'm looking at Millwaukee 28V or 18V. 14.4V used to drive a screw in well enough so do I need a 28V? Guess I just want it.
And whats with the Hammer Drills? Do I need that? The only experience I have with a hammer drill is with somebody else using one to drill concrete. Will a hammer drill do well for semi presision drilling, say for drilling metal or driving screws?
Sorry for my long winded thread. I tried looking on the net but just got over loaded.
Anything made in the USA?
Mike
__________________
98 12V 2500 Club Cab, 2WD, Auto.
egt, boost and tranny guages. Garmin 2720, XM rad.
170K+ miles
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10-22-2009, 04:50 AM
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#2 (permalink)
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Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: North of Chicago/Suburb
Posts: 524
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I have had them all but love my 28 volt Milwaukee, it is as powerful as any electric, I use it almost daily I have the combo kit with saw, light, sawz all. I have had it over three years with same batteries.
Rick
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Cummins Lover and Always Changing Things!
See truck profile, most likely its out dated by now! 2002
3500 4x4 SLT. Auto
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10-22-2009, 02:43 PM
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#3 (permalink)
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Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Star, Idaho
Posts: 44
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Thanks Rick, thats exactly what I was looking for, someone that has used them all. That 3 piece kit does look nice as I dont have a sawsall. They have a 4 piece kit that includes a circular saw also. Will see what I can afford.
Many folks say good things about Milwaukee.
I noticed on their site that the 28V is a hammer drill, no other option so looks like I will have a hammer drill.
Thanks again
Mike
__________________
98 12V 2500 Club Cab, 2WD, Auto.
egt, boost and tranny guages. Garmin 2720, XM rad.
170K+ miles
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10-22-2009, 03:17 PM
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#4 (permalink)
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Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: North of Chicago/Suburb
Posts: 524
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Actually I have the four piece kit! I have not used an electric circular saw since having the kit. Did an entire deck with it. The batteries have a "fuel" Gauge and go till they are dead. Tools do not slow down, they just stop when battery is dead. Good luck, and check e-bay for good prices.
Rick
__________________
Cummins Lover and Always Changing Things!
See truck profile, most likely its out dated by now! 2002
3500 4x4 SLT. Auto
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10-22-2009, 03:27 PM
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#5 (permalink)
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Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: Avocado Capitol, So.Cal.
Posts: 1,928
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I am a custom cabinet maker and use the Dewalt line of tools . 18volt works fine for me. I would highly recommend the lithium batteries in what ever you buy. Be sure you look at the milliamp rating on the battery it cost more to make higher milliamp batteries. wouldn't waste time with the hammer drill use the real thing when you need it .
__________________
2004.5 LWB 2wd , Volant cold air intake,custom H.I.D.'s w/Fogzilla 15,000 lumens forward lighting, 3" front lift ,Triple Pillar Gauges, Amsoil Dual Remote Bypass,Pre-Oiler, CFM+ Intake. SMARTY JR. Straight piped
Good Judgment Comes From Experience
Experience Comes From Bad Judgment
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10-23-2009, 04:53 AM
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#6 (permalink)
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Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Santa Cruz, Ca & Marinette, WI
Posts: 592
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Dito p-bar except:
I like the hammer drill option. It's handy to have for occational masonry situations.
Not to use it all day long, but to have it in your tool box for 30-40 holes in concrete, is mighty handy.
Ray
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98 3500 12V DUALLY,LAR/SLT,Q-CAB,RED/BLK,AWD,47RE,4.10,84K MI. ALL STK EXC,KDP TABBED,& F-SHROUD ACCESS.
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10-23-2009, 05:21 AM
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#7 (permalink)
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Join Date: Mar 2007
Posts: 757
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Really you MUST check out the Makita LXT series BEFORE you buy anything else.
They are extremely well designed and built, LIGHTER, but more powerful then any other similar voltage cordless unit. I use their 18 volt series and it has never let me down. The impact driver leaves all other drivers I have ever used in the dust in terms of power and ease of operation--as I get older, I prefer my tools to be lighter as well as powerful.
Just a note, when I first bought the set, I laughed at the inclusion of their LCD light on eact tool that helps to light up the area of operation, but NOW I laugh at myself each time it turns on automatically when I pull the trigger, because more often then not I need more light to see what I am doing, and the little LCD actaully throws enought light for me to be grateful for it.!!
Just my 2 cents-- they are AWESOME!!
__________________
C. Fish
2005 SLT 4x4 QC LB 6 speed,
GDP intake horn with grid delete,
Defiant Steering Box Support, Michelin LTX/AT2
SS fender flares, SS bug guard, SS mesh grill
Caravan Campershell with HD Lumber Rack
Reunel SS Rear Bumper with LineX step and Lights
Line-X Bedliner
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10-23-2009, 04:07 PM
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#8 (permalink)
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I also have the 18V Makita LXT. As seafish said, it's light weight and has plenty of power. I have the 8 tool combo set that includes everything, even a AM/FM/ipod ready radio.
I also have Milwaukee, DeWalt and Ridgid cordless tools. The Makita with 4, 18V lithium batteries is the best. Yes, I use these tools every day.
__________________
2005 Dodge 3500 DRW, 4x4, 325/610 HO, 6 speed NV5600, Laramie H, Quad Cab, 3.73 gears, Flame Red, Luverne SS Running Boards w/Box Boards, Luverne SS Push Bar/Grill Guard, BrakeSmart, PacBrake
2008 Arctic Fox 5th Wheel, 27-5L
95 DRW, 4x4, SOLD
98 11' 3" Lance Camper, SOLD
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10-23-2009, 06:09 PM
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#9 (permalink)
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Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 256
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We used the Dewalt 18V series at work. They took a lot of abuse. Batteries lasted
about 2 years. The hammer drill is good for cinder block, not solid concrete. If you
have an older Makita, I would hang on to it. They had a very good power to weight
ratio, and were will made.
__________________
'07, 5.9L, 4X4, QC, SB, Big Horn, 48RE, Isspro guages,
PacBrake airbags, Line-X, Agri-Cover, Bilsteins
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10-23-2009, 07:17 PM
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#10 (permalink)
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Join Date: Mar 2007
Posts: 757
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Quote:
Originally Posted by bheiting
We used the Dewalt 18V series at work. They took a lot of abuse. Batteries lasted
about 2 years. The hammer drill is good for cinder block, not solid concrete. If you
have an older Makita, I would hang on to it. They had a very good power to weight
ratio, and were will made.
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IMHO, the new Makita LI ion 18v blow the older NiCad or NiMh away interms of power to weight ratio. I am also pretty sure that volt per volt, they pack more punch then the Dewalt, and are also MUCH lighter.
__________________
C. Fish
2005 SLT 4x4 QC LB 6 speed,
GDP intake horn with grid delete,
Defiant Steering Box Support, Michelin LTX/AT2
SS fender flares, SS bug guard, SS mesh grill
Caravan Campershell with HD Lumber Rack
Reunel SS Rear Bumper with LineX step and Lights
Line-X Bedliner
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10-23-2009, 07:34 PM
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#11 (permalink)
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Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Staten Island, NY
Posts: 87
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I have Dewalt 18 volt, including their hammer drill. you can use the hammer drill or just switch off for regular drilling. They have many tools that share the 18 volt batteries and the newer batteries work in older drills. I also bought charger that takes 2 batteries at a time and charges 7.2 volt to 18 volt batteries all Dewalt types.
__________________
06 QC, 2500, auto, 4:10, mineral grey, intake baffle delete, muffler delete, 2in level kit/with Bilstein 5100 shocks, Diamond Back bed cover and diamond plate side steps, much more to do $$$$$.
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10-23-2009, 08:15 PM
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#12 (permalink)
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I just got a deal today on a Milwaukee combo kit from ToolDispatch.com. I purchased the Milwaukee V18 NiCd kit including the Drill/Hammer Drill, Impact Driver, Sawzall, Light, 2 Batteries and Charger for $315. Everyone I work with raves over the power of the V18. I have always owned a DeWalt 18 Volt, I am anxious to see how this new Milwaukee staks up.
Oh, if you are in the market for the Hammer-Drill only tooldisptach has them for $249.
__________________
2004.5 - 2500 - Reg. Cab - SLT - Auto - Edge Juice/Attitude - Overhead RP, LP - AirDog 150/DrawStraw I - Fuel Tank Vent Kit - Purchased "new to me" on 4/18/09
Link to "My Pics"
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10-23-2009, 09:30 PM
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#13 (permalink)
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Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: Deposit Ny
Posts: 89
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Bosch make excellent products and they have a 36 volt drill that will spin you like a ceiling light.
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10-24-2009, 09:27 AM
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#14 (permalink)
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Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Edgefield, SC
Posts: 17
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I also use my Milwaukee drill daily, have an older 18V one (must be 10 years old now!) that I now use w/V18 lithium ion batteries, best cordless I have ever used, and I've used most of them. V18 batteries last a lot longer than the Ni-cads.
__________________
2004 3500 SLT Laramie QC HO 6 speed 3.73
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10-24-2009, 12:59 PM
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#15 (permalink)
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Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Star, Idaho
Posts: 44
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Thanks guys for all the replys. Man, they have come a long way with these cordless tools. From what I'm hearing the 18V would have done the job for me but I ordered the Milwaukee 28V, 4 piece kit the other night. I am sure I will be tickled with it, I kind of like overkill when it comes to tools and trucks.
I drove all over town looking for 28V the other day, nobody had them. But I did find Milwaukee 18V 4 piece kit on sale at Home Depot for $399. Might should have got that. Oh well 28V is in the mail.
Thanks again for your replies.
Mike
__________________
98 12V 2500 Club Cab, 2WD, Auto.
egt, boost and tranny guages. Garmin 2720, XM rad.
170K+ miles
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