Impressed with them?Thanks for pointing that deal out bought a set yesterday
Retired my makitas to workshop
Impressed with them?Thanks for pointing that deal out bought a set yesterday
Retired my makitas to workshop
60 minutes to charge a 1.7Ah high drain battery (which looks enormous btw) !1.7ah powerstack batteries (if you get the extra promotional one), charger ...
In this instance the Milwaukee SF offer would seem the better deal? Similar cost but with an impact driver?Recently I bought
https://www.powertoolworld.co.uk/makita-dhp484z-18v-lxt-brushless-2-speed-combi-drill-body-only
https://www.powertoolworld.co.uk/ma...charger-kit-inc-2x-5-0ah-batts-dc18rc-charger
Drill driver £80.00
2X 5ah batteries and charger £145
Total £225
It's a decent drill driver.
Brushless are better by a mile.Not given them a thorough workout yet my makitas had been used daily on site for 3 years and were ready for replacing ,also wanted to give brushless a try
that does sound lengthy for a small battery to charge, not an issue I was aware of.60 minutes to charge a 1.7Ah high drain battery (which looks enormous btw) !
That's at least part of where they are cutting costs to be able to offer the deal.
This monthBut that's it, no more battery tools!!!!
Do tell.Makita battery powered blue tooth vacuum doohdad
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.
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.
Someone made a valid point some while ago - a battery fails when the weakest cell fail, so it makes sense to buy the the tool with the voltage you need - if 12v suits your needs there are fewer cells to go wrong.
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 ha lways been the main cause of 12v car batteries
The weakest cell failing has always been the main cause of car batteries failing, by dragging down the others. (Or so I'm led to believe)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.
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.
Someone made a valid point some while ago - a battery fails when the weakest cell fail, so it makes sense to buy the the tool with the voltage you need - if 12v suits your needs there are fewer cells to go wrong.
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.
How many realise they're paying to advertise Makita! All clothing with the manufacturers' logo on should be FREE (IMHO) as it's advertising for them!Sorry for slight thread drift but this used to be a reason for some people to buy Makita.
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.
Wish I'd saved them now
https://www.etsy.com/uk/listing/854...3rI2ebc-ZKcB9zRTp7h41TPCqrhBSk4xoCyDgQAvD_BwE
On the noise front: Makita do a series of "oil pulse" impact drivers, designed to be nearly silent. Not as cheap as a normal impact driver, but probably very helpful if doing a lot of 6" screws.I don't use impact drivers, too noisy and can't use them where I work.
Plus I don't see the need for the impact stuff as I know how to drive a 6" screw with a normal driver.
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