The UK Home Automation Archive

Archive Home
Group Home
Search Archive


Advanced Search

The UKHA-ARCHIVE IS CEASING OPERATIONS 31 DEC 2024

Latest message you have seen: RE: DIY Rack cases Was: RE: How deep is your love ?


[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

Re: Cordless drills



I've used a lot of Cordless drills in my conversion and I don't
particularly rate DeWalt.  They're the best marketing of the lot, but
quality, which used to be superb when they were Elu, has gone way
down.  If you use one of their 'hammer' drills for hammering (which
you shouldn't), it won't last at all.  I haven't tried it, but
suspect it's probably better to by 5-10 of the cheap ones instead of
brands like DeWalt.  Other brands like Makita and Hitachi are as good
and can be cheaper than DW, although you can get occasional excellent
prices on DW.  Whatever you do, don't pay anything like full price
for a DW.  Try Westward Building Services (01752-330-303).  They
often have sales of cheap drills.  Sometimes refurb, but there's not
much difference.

If you really want a good one, go for Festo, but they cost even more
and the ratio of cheap ones you can buy instead goes up.  Things to
watch on all the drills is the start up speed.  Often this seems to
be the first thing to go, but if you're using as a screwdriver, you
need very very good control at low speeds.  That often sorts out good
>from

Ben

--- In ukha_d@xxxxxxx, "White, Peter" <peter.white@b...>
wrote:
> Thanks, useful to know.  Anybody know a cheap source for quality
drills,
> other than Screwfix and eBay?
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Steve Morgan [mailto:steve@xxxxxxx...]
> Sent: 22 June 2003 19:05
> To: ukha_d@xxxxxxx
> Subject: RE: [ukha_d] Cordless drills
>
>
> Here's another 2p worth...
>
> The DeWalt cordless drills are indeed expensive. However, so are
the rest of
> the good ones, the (professional) Bosch's, Panasonics, etc. Bosch
have two
> ranges, the green consumer stuff and the blue professional stuff.
IMHO, the
> green stuff is no beter than B&D these days. The blue stuff is
very
good,
> well worthy of consideration. Given the relative prices of the
professional
> stuff, I'd be inclined to go for the DeWalt.
>
> Go to a specialist, not a DIY shed, and buy a drill you can be
proud of.
> Here's a thing about DeWalt stuff - I have one of their big
routers, a
> DW625EK. I've stopped looking at routers now - there's nothing more
I aspire
> to. That doesn't happen very often.
>
> Steve
>




Home | Main Index | Thread Index

Comments to the Webmaster are always welcomed, please use this contact form . Note that as this site is a mailing list archive, the Webmaster has no control over the contents of the messages. Comments about message content should be directed to the relevant mailing list.