Again I beg to differ Roy? Switching to a common battery (physical battery size, connection type, firmware interface are the necessary changes).It is the fact that by using common components you produce products with a common look, so a single cordless tool platform would mean all tools being manufactured to accomodate this battery. The solution might be that all OEM's worked together to produce the tool and battery but then if all tools were the same then some of the OEM's would cease to exist and with less OEM's and competition inthe market prices would rise.
Desktop printers and ink !If the tool manufacturer can no longer rely on getting income from the batteries they will need to get more income from the tool itself.
Not sure why you assume I'd buy a 'berts battery' rather than a Makita battery (compliant with the standard)?Battery cost logic - If there was a standard for tool batteries, anyone could make those batteries.
Absolutely. And not just desktop printers - It's almost cheaper to buy a new printer than replace the consumables in my laser printer.Desktop printers and ink !
I understand that currently. The generic batteries I've tried have been rubbish.Not sure why you assume I'd buy a 'berts battery' rather than a Makita battery (compliant with the standard)?
I know which manufacturer I'd prefer to buy from.
Good point. I'd certainly think about that... Which might address the competition (within a standard) that has been put forward as a reason for 'not' having a standard?I understand that currently. The generic batteries I've tried have been rubbish.
However, imagine if there was a standard tool battery and a specialist battery manufacturer got involved. What if there was a Duracell battery for your Makita. Would you still be so wedded to the Makira batteries?
Mafell and Festool are professional tools aimed at professional users. You arent going to find either doing a cordless combi drill and an impact driver for £99 inc 2 batteries.IMHO more fools them? No company is better than a wide standardisation?
Not sure I can see a manufacturer changing direction totally for the sake of a battery? No need.Mafell and Festool are professional tools aimed at professional users. You arent going to find either doing a cordless combi drill and an impact driver for £99 inc 2 batteries.
Completely different market
Mafell also collab with Starmix on their extractors.Some of Mafell's tools are Metabo designs (very possibly with improvements and more rigorous quality control) such as their 10.8V drill driver. The companies have cooperated for many years.
So Mafell belong to the other, longer established collective. Their cordless tools use the Metabo (CAS) battery platform as do over 38 other brands.
https://cordless-alliance-system.com/en/brand-world.php
View attachment 189324
Notice the LiHD branding that Metabo created when it was the first company to make packs with the bigger 20700 cells.
Mafell also cooperate with Bosch. The Mafell tracksaw guide rail is a Bosch design and manufactured for them by Bosch. Bosch have a corded tracksaw that is heavily based on the corded Mafell MT55.
Tossing this into the debate :
Maybe there is a layer of "standardisation" going on in batteries already.
The major brands latest generation batteries all use a very limited range of cells.
Arguably the highest performance cell from which powertool batteries are assembled is the the Samsung INR 21700 40T.
These are the cells used by Dewalt in their 8 and 12Ah flexvolt packs,
by Hercules (a house brand of one of the American DIY chains)
by Ryobi
by Ridgid
by Bosch in the proCore packs
If the different brands are using the same cells, there isn't a lot of room to squeeze extra performance from them.
If you open the lack up and it’s full of samsung 18650’s, it’s going to generally be on the higher end of the quality spectrum.Performance can vary widely within any standard. IMHO the customer 'definition' of standards
will be the interchangeability and shared charger?
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