Phil Pascoe
Established Member
I wonder whether there are regional influences - virtually everyone I know who uses power tools has ditched Makita. Usually the preferred brands are DeWalt and Milwaukee, I know no one totally committed to Bosch.
Probably depends on which side of the Tamar your on...!I wonder whether there are regional influences - virtually everyone I know who uses power tools has ditched Makita. Usually the preferred brands are DeWalt and Milwaukee, I know no one totally committed to Bosch.
Same hereMakita 18v 5ah. for on site if there's a possibility of it going walkies and Festool for me or workshop use because I'm a TART.
I wonder whether there are regional influences - virtually everyone I know who uses power tools has ditched Makita. Usually the preferred brands are DeWalt and Milwaukee, I know no one totally committed to Bosch.
Some 25 years I was in NZ with my sister and b.i.l. and he told me he got his batteries re celled rather than buying new batteries. (I hadn't heard of its being done here at that time). The firm he used told him that 95% of the batteries they opened up had either Sony or Panasonics in them.The cells inside the batteries are made by a small number of companies ( Panasonic,Sony,and sanyo)and then put in a branded plastic case so there's very little difference between a 4ah from DeWalt, Milwaukee,Bosch etc. With drills and drivers particularly, ease of use and performance relies more on the drill bits and driver bits you use than the tool, quality is worth searching out.
Using a matched set of cells in a battery pack certainly makes a difference to the life of the pack.Apparently the batteries are checked for output at manufacture and balanced sets used for Panasonic, Festool etc. the high end manufacturers, and the lower quality one for tools further down the scale. The balanced output affects the life expectancy from what I've read.
True, my good lady got a Makita lawnmower and hedge trimmer for her birthday.Same here
I would also look at the range of tools available for a brand.
Eg Makita have a huge range of over 250 tools which all use their 18v batteries.
You may not want that cordless chainsaw right now but hey wouldn't it be great if next year when you do it was available with out having to buy different batteries.
THIS!I spoke to a chap who works for an independent builder's merchant - he said you wouldn't believe the number of people who criticise the performance of power tools while using the cheapest bits and blades they can get their hands on.
I remember these! My grandfather used to have Makita stuff in the Seventies/early Eighties, and I always had the caps. When I started out, I naturally got Makita tools. No caps though (bummer!)Does anyone else remember back in the day when you bought a Makita power tool there was always a free cap in the box (talking probably 40+ years ago), they were kind of like a cycling cap, I hated the things and they went straight in the bin.
Thanks for pointing that deal out bought a set yesterdayThis is a current offer from Screwfix that seems to be a good deal for what you want - £230, which is better than the other usual suspects and includes 2x 5Ah batteries.
Milwaukee M18 CBLPP2A-502C 18V 2 x 5.0Ah Li-Ion RedLithium Brushless Cordless Combi Drill & Impact Driver Twin Pack Product code: 229HV
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