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Cordless drills ?

Started by b5blue, January 18, 2014, 10:43:24 AM

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b5blue

 I have some Ryobi cordless drills and a flashlight. Of course the batteries are both dead now. The reason I have 2 drills and a flashlight is every time I look at replacing the battery it's cheaper to buy a new set then just batteries!
What's up with this?  :lol: I can buy 2 NiCad for 60.00 or 2 Lith Ion a charger and drill for 80?  :shruggy:
Anyone got a cordless with good battery life they are using?

twodko

FLY NAVY/Marine Corps or take the bus!

cavemanno1

Yep,Dewalt is one of the best,indestructible and Panasonic.We use them in the rain,people drop them constantly and the battery last for ever obviously depends on the job!If you use it a lot then it's worth paying for a quality one instead of the cheap ones! :Twocents:  

http://www.dewalt.com/tools/Cordless-Tools.aspx
http://shop.panasonic.com/shop/model/EY7450LR2S

Silver R/T

Got Ryobi at home but don't use very often. I prefer corded tools vs cordless
http://www.cardomain.com/id/mitmaks

1968 silver/black/red striped R/T
My Charger is hybrid, it runs on gas and on tears of ricers
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War wagon

All my power tool are dewalt. I have a 36v cordless impact gun that's capable of 300 ft tq yes Footpounds of torque
Batteries last a very long time.
Tough tools that last in my expirence

tan top

 last couple of cordless drills ive  bought  have been Dewalt  :yesnod:
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JB400

Mine's a DeWalt 14.4 volt.  It does the job and doesn't weigh as much as the 18 volt.

Have you checked into getting your batteries rebuilt?

moparguy01

i use the dewalt 20 volt. they got it alot lighter than the 18 volt. the battery does go dead alittle faster, but i think its worth it. Makita also makes good stuff.

ws23rt

I'm in industrial construction and I see more dewalt than other brands.  With a few chargers and several batteries power cords are seldom used.

I was a skeptic at first but the power and batt. life sold me.

Bob T

Another vote here for Makita, I brought a 6pk kit with skilly, saber saw, light, drill, impact driver and grinder for $2k about 5 years ago and it gets used  ( hard ) most days and stands up to the task.
All m.i.c. now though, unfortunately like most stuff, how about Milwaukee power tools, they look like they'll stand up to it and made in USA ( I hope )
Old Dog, Old Tricks.

Hard Charger

I have sold them all, you get what you pay for.

the cheaper tools are less quality.

the mentality that prevails is buy cheap and throw away when the tool is shot. lots of guys have problems with abusing them or possibility of theft so less investment to replace them.

I like Hitachi and Panasonic.

big thing is to buy the tool with the modern battery so memory is not an issue.

bill440rt

Neal, same here.
I bought a cordless Ryobi tool assortment set years ago. Each tool uses the same battery. I'm on my second set of batteries, and now need a third because these won't hold a charge anymore either.
The tools are all in great shape still. I don't want to throw them away either, because they all work good with a full charge.
I might try other sources for batteries, maybe eBay or BatteriesPlus or something.
If not, I'll be in the market for a new cordless drill/driver as well.  :popcrn:
"Strive for perfection in everything. Take the best that exists and make it better. If it doesn't exist, create it. Accept nothing nearly right or good enough." Sir Henry Rolls Royce

Tilar

I have Dewalt and if the 4 year old batteries ever do go bad there is a place maybe 10 miles up the road, I'm going to take them and have them rebuilt.
Dave  

God must love stupid people; He made so many.



b5blue

10 years ago I could qualify a 200-300 cordless for construction, it made me money or saved time. Now I'm out of contractor B.S. completely (Thank the Lord!) so I may just chuck all this in the trash and use my old screw gun and drill, heck I still have 400ft of extension cords, some are even the huge fat ones.  :scratchchin:   

bakerhillpins

I have tried/used a bunch of different brands and talked with a few friends that are contractors. End result - If you use them all the time the batteries tend to have a better lifespan. Several contractors I know just buy the cheap stuff and basically report that they last as long as the batteries so they don't feel so bad about tossing them in the metal scrap bin and buying new. I got crappy life span out of lots of them simply because I didn't use them much in between projects. Last time I checked you could get replacement Ryobi batteries for cheaper than a kit, or you can rebuild them with new cells if you are handy.
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squeakfinder

Quote from: bakerhillpins on January 18, 2014, 05:49:09 PM
I have tried/used a bunch of different brands and talked with a few friends that are contractors. End result - If you use them all the time the batteries tend to have a better lifespan. Several contractors I know just buy the cheap stuff and basically report that they last as long as the batteries so they don't feel so bad about tossing them in the metal scrap bin and buying new. I got crappy life span out of lots of them simply because I didn't use them much in between projects. Last time I checked you could get replacement Ryobi batteries for cheaper than a kit, or you can rebuild them with new cells if you are handy.









I've wondered why some battery's last longer than others. I have this Black & Decker set up at home that I don't use much and one of the two batteries I have is toast. Yet there are several different cordless tools used at work that are 18 volt Dewalts that get used all the time and the batteries are holding up.
Still looking for 15x7 Appliance slotted mags.....

bakerhillpins

I would lay dollars to doughnuts that the battery that is toast isn't used as much. Your use habits probably favor one over the other. Like you use it but don't drain it. Thus when you are done with the tool you put that battery in the charger which is than conditioned.  Lather, rinse, repeat and one battery gets the better end of the stick and lives longer.  The ones at the office are probably constantly being discharged and passed through the charger.
One great wife (Life is good)
14 RAM 1500 5.7 Hemi Crew Cab (crap hauler)
69 Dodge Charger R/T, Q5, C6X, V1X, V88  (Life is WAY better)
96' VFR750 (Sweet)
Capt. Lyme Vol. Fire

"Inspiration is for amateurs - the rest of us just show up and get to work." -Chuck Close
"The difference between stupidity and genius is that genius has its limits." -Albert Einstein
Go that way, really fast. If something gets in your way, turn.
Science flies you to the moon, Religion flies you into buildings.

green69rt

Couple of comments based on word of mouth, no proof.....

Lithium Ion batteries are not rebuild able by law.  I tried to take them in to the local shop and they said no go!!

The shop also said that you should not leave a LI battery on the charger, tends to cut the working life.  Once it's charged get it off.

I now have a Makita cordless drill and light and so far it does great.

2Gunz


charger Downunder

[/quote]

Bob T

Quote from: bakerhillpins on January 18, 2014, 08:24:36 PM
I would lay dollars to doughnuts that the battery that is toast isn't used as much. Your use habits probably favor one over the other. Like you use it but don't drain it. Thus when you are done with the tool you put that battery in the charger which is than conditioned.  Lather, rinse, repeat and one battery gets the better end of the stick and lives longer.  The ones at the office are probably constantly being discharged and passed through the charger.

Dead right. I number my batteries 1, 2 & 3 so I know they are getting a good rotation through the tools and charger. You have to be banging the tools pretty hard to use battery # 3 all up by the time #1 is fully charged, skilly and grinder hammer them though. The grinder will also trip with light load if the battery is not fresh too, some some demand/rate type of function.
Old Dog, Old Tricks.

bull

I have been using Milwaukee for years, ever since they started producing nickel cad battery tools. Never have a lick of trouble with all five tools I own. Two drills, two hammer drivers and a 3/8" ratchet. If you look up ratings you'll see that Milwaukee always rates high, usually in the top two.

Patronus

I am a very strong proponent for DeWalt. Im a professional and I count on my cordless tools daily. Number/mark the batteries. Never leave them in the cold van. If you dont use them, they will discharge somewhat. I have also heard about zapping old batteries with your welder..?
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bull

Quote from: Patronus on January 19, 2014, 10:13:25 AM
I am a very strong proponent for DeWalt. Im a professional and I count on my cordless tools daily.

I think this same testimonial was on the DeWalt website. Did you copy/paste it? :nana:

1970Moparmann

I heard from multiple people that since Dewalt was purchased by Black and Decker, nothing but problems....  I had a cheap Ryobi and it lasted through a whole remodel of a house.  I replaced with a Dewalt and the motor died within a year of virtually no use.....

In my research I might either get a Milwaukee / Makita.
My name is Mike and I'm a Moparholic!