frankendoodle65
Established Member
Hi all, I'm currently in the market for a small 12v drill/driver, mainly for those awkward hard to reach spots but it may well take other duties from my 18v Makita drills if it's nicer to use.
My first thought was the Bosch flexiclick, seems seems to be available around £175 with two batteries, right angle head, offset head etc. Looks like it covers everything at a good price so might be the obvious choice here.
Also looking at the Festool cxs for about £260, fewer accessories and less powerful but people seem to absolutely love the ergonomics if it. I'm happy to pay extra if it's genuinely a nicer tool to use. Bonus that it comes with a systainer, the Bosch L-box would be wasted on me. I'm very confused about centrotec so if anyone can explain that to me it would be nice, would I need a whole new set of proprietary bits to replace my standard 1/4" hex bits?
The festool TXS can also be found for similar prices, from a quick googling I get the impression users generally prefer the CXS but I've not done a lot of research yet.
Milwaukee make what looks like a copy of the festool but a bit more modern with more power and a brushless motor. Honestly I think the weird forward/reverse button would drive me mad so I'm discounting that one unless anyone can convince me otherwise?
Are there any others worth looking at? Happy to spend up to about £260, I just want something small and light with a right angle attachment for those hard to reach places. I don't have any 12v tools at present, so not worried about battery platforms - I know Bosch and Milwaukee both have extensive 12v ranges but in all honesty I'm unlikely to get any other 12v tools as I have it all in Makita 18v lxt and have no need for tiny saws or routers!
My first thought was the Bosch flexiclick, seems seems to be available around £175 with two batteries, right angle head, offset head etc. Looks like it covers everything at a good price so might be the obvious choice here.
Also looking at the Festool cxs for about £260, fewer accessories and less powerful but people seem to absolutely love the ergonomics if it. I'm happy to pay extra if it's genuinely a nicer tool to use. Bonus that it comes with a systainer, the Bosch L-box would be wasted on me. I'm very confused about centrotec so if anyone can explain that to me it would be nice, would I need a whole new set of proprietary bits to replace my standard 1/4" hex bits?
The festool TXS can also be found for similar prices, from a quick googling I get the impression users generally prefer the CXS but I've not done a lot of research yet.
Milwaukee make what looks like a copy of the festool but a bit more modern with more power and a brushless motor. Honestly I think the weird forward/reverse button would drive me mad so I'm discounting that one unless anyone can convince me otherwise?
Are there any others worth looking at? Happy to spend up to about £260, I just want something small and light with a right angle attachment for those hard to reach places. I don't have any 12v tools at present, so not worried about battery platforms - I know Bosch and Milwaukee both have extensive 12v ranges but in all honesty I'm unlikely to get any other 12v tools as I have it all in Makita 18v lxt and have no need for tiny saws or routers!