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Author: Subject: Black and Decker drills
Rorty

posted on 9/9/05 at 09:52 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by owelly
I have always hankered after Dewalt stuff so when I was ordering tools for a big job at work I spent £4k on Dewalt stuff. What a waste of money. The battery drills kept on knackering bearings. The mains drills were clumsy to use (the variable trigger was all or nothing) and they also ate chuck bearings. The jigsaws kept lunching gearboxes. The angle grinders munched the bevel drives. etc, etc. We ended up using the old Makita stuff that we were suposed to be scrapping.
It's not as if it was one person we could brame for abusing the stuff but several 'competent' people who should know how to use tools (and were personally accountable for them). The old Makita stuff is still going strong and most of it is over 6 years old.

Well fyck me pink! That's the first time I've ever heard anything bad about DeWalt.





Cheers, Rorty.

"Faster than a speeding Pullet".

PLEASE DON'T U2U ME IF YOU WANT A QUICK RESPONSE. TRY EMAILING ME INSTEAD!

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Peteff

posted on 9/9/05 at 10:41 PM Reply With Quote
When I worked at the box factory we used to make boxes for B&Decker and De Walt. They both went to the same factory, I think it was in Livingston at the time. I have a Metabo 9" angle grinder which has cut slabs for a lot of its working life and I used my new Bosch SDS+ drill for the first time today. I thought the hammer action wasn't working till I leaned on it and it just sank in effortlessly.





yours, Pete

I went into the RSPCA office the other day. It was so small you could hardly swing a cat in there.

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NS Dev

posted on 12/9/05 at 11:45 AM Reply With Quote
just another thought, Hitachi stuff is pretty tough too!
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Dale

posted on 12/9/05 at 12:16 PM Reply With Quote
Well I know I wont by any more Makita stuff here in Canada- Last Drill I bought from them lasted about 6 months of easy use. Not made like they used to. My friend has the older stuff 10 yrs + and it they just keep chugging away with no problems. Makita here now comes with a wonderfull 3 month warranty on it - Even Canadian tire warrenties their heavier tools 3 years here. Dewalts the way to go here but out of my price range.





Thanks
Dale

my 14 and11 year old boys 22
and 19 now want to drive but have to be 25 before insurance will allow. Finally on the road

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A3rd.Zero

posted on 19/9/05 at 05:40 AM Reply With Quote
Milwaukee Magnum.

I would be very very surprised if you could burn this drill out. I was shooting 5/8" holes in SCD40 pipe all day with only 1/16" pilot holes and she got really hot but had no problems, and its an eight year old drill. The new ones are just as good.

Milo

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DarrenW

posted on 22/9/05 at 11:46 AM Reply With Quote
Can i just say, speaking from experience after being involved in power tool new product development, that within each of the manufacturers that have been commented on there are different ranges of tools.

Within DeWalt their are light user professional through to heavy duty professional. Unfortunately a common synergy within all of the manufacturers is the crazy marketing strategies. The professional users are not always communicated to correctly in terms of what products they should buy for their applications and few professionals want to be told what they need to do the job and how much they should spend. I have designed and installed production lines for DeWalt Cordless drills and can say categorically that if you use the light duty stuff in a heavy environment you cannot expect it to perform faultlessly. Price is a big factor in most peoples eyes, unfortunately so is the potential for site theft so most people tend to buy cheap and abuse lots - not a good recipe.
By the same token you cant compare low end Bosch to high end Makita, to compound it further no two people use the products in the same way.

To be honest there is very little between the big manufacturers within each of the sectors and all of the products are mass made so there is always a chance of infant failure - this is a feature and product of the reliability Weibull models.






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MikeR

posted on 22/9/05 at 12:23 PM Reply With Quote
bloke on a building site i know has a different view .... B&Q home brand for battery power.

costs 4 or 5 timse less than a 'decent' brand and lasts 1/3 to 1/2 the time. After its broke, scrap it, keep the charger / battery. You spend less in the long run and get more batteries / chargers so can keep going for longer!

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NS Dev

posted on 28/9/05 at 11:10 AM Reply With Quote
that's fine as long as you also keep 2 of every tool in the van!

Otherwise you can bugger up a day's work if not near the shops and a tool packs in.

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oliwb

posted on 8/11/05 at 05:28 PM Reply With Quote
Metabo drills are legendary! Mine has had so much abuse! Had for about 4 years and its been used in a farm workshop...not the most hospitable place for a tool! Managed my build without any probs...also my Draper cordless one is still going strong after similar amount of abuse.....not as powerfull though! Only thing wrong with it is when the dog knocked the charging battery of a chair in the kitchen and smashed the battery clip! Oli.





If your not living life on the edge you're taking up too much room!

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