Tacklife RES003 foot plate has a 4-speed adjustable range, which helps to change the cutting length and make rational use of the blade, thereby extending the service life of the blade; it has a lever-driven blade replacement mechanism to make
You can quickly change the blade without using any other tools, which can make work more efficient and convenient
Variable Speed & Safety Button
The variable speed trigger operates at 0-3000 RPM through the trigger sensitivity, which enhances the blade control ability and allows you to control the speed more effectively
With dual safety switch control, the saw can only move forward when two buttons are pressed. The safety button can largely avoid accidental activation and injury to ensure safety
1 Inch Stroke & 4 Inch Cutting Depth
The cutting depth of wood is 4 inches
This TACKLIFE saw is very versatile and can cut a variety of materials, such as plastics, branches, PVC pipes and even roots, so it can handle various applications and projects
The stroke length of 1 inch can remove more material in each stroke to increase the cutting speed, providing you with more, reliability and high cost performance
20V Battery & LED Indicator
Tacklife professional 20V lithium ion battery can last up to 30 minutes max each time, and can be cut quickly and controlled
Wireless design can be used anytime and anywhere, increasing convenience and portability
Power indicator allows you to monitor the battery level and remind you to charge it in time to avoid work delays
Need Attention
When charging the battery for the first time, it is recommended to charge for another 20-30 minutes after filling
In this way, it can protect the cell of the battery and prolong battery life ( Only for the first charge )
In addition, to avoid accidental injury, it is recommended that you remove the battery when replacing the blade
This battery looks remarkably similar in aesthetic and actual functional design to a WORX battery…
It’s probably just wishful thinking to hope they’d be cross compatible, right?
@breakerswitch all the batteries of same voltage of different brands are essentially the same. In many cases made by the same people.
The difference is the battery casing all deliberately made a little bit different to force you into their “ecosystem”… But you can find adapters for some of the common brands.
You might be able to look on Amazon to see if the have an adapter from Track life to worx. I doubt without an adapter it would work though. Theres probably a plastic nub on the back or something tiny like that that makes an adapter necessary.
@OnionSoup Thanks for the details! That makes sense to me, in the same way that “With a little dremel work, you can play ‘region locked’ Japanese N64 games on your American N64” makes sense.
@breakerswitch@OnionSoup a pair of male & femal spade adapters and some wire is all that is needed yo use batteries from these different 20v chinese tools. I do it all the time. .
@braveit1@breakerswitch@OnionSoup TBH, the Tacklife 20V looks closer to a DeWalt (5 terminal, inside ridge slide) than a Worx (6 terminal, outside ridge slide).
Better than just extending wires is mounting a common battery dock or adapter in place of the battery shoe. I did this recently to a sub-$20 Einhell polisher – used a sub-$4 Dayi-Makita battery adapter just for the mount. Extended the wires, and now it runs with Makita-ish batteries (from sub-$30 chainsaws).
@breakerswitch@narfcake@OnionSoup even though there are 5/6 slots, you only need 2 connection points (power & ground) to make it work. I"ve also designed & 3d printed adapters when i needed a more permanent connection. But for a quick run, the two wires on a spade connection work fine when my battery died and still needed to finish a task.
@braveit1@breakerswitch@narfcake@OnionSoup the additional connections are likely used for cell balancing when charging. Some of the systems are smart enough to have the balancing board in the pack. Look for those when doing the nicd upgrade.
@narfcake right - upgrade from nicds. Throw out the nicds (recycle) use the cells and bms board from a lithium pack. I have b&d, formerly nicds, tools that are still good (especially the reciprocating saw - sorry meh) and probably better than new with lithium. The tacklife pack is likely gel cells. Look for 18650’s or similar.
Specs
Product: Tacklife Cordless Reciprocating Saw
Model: USAKKOG192747
Condition: New
Adjustable Foot Plate & Tool-less Blade Change
Variable Speed & Safety Button
1 Inch Stroke & 4 Inch Cutting Depth
20V Battery & LED Indicator
Need Attention
When charging the battery for the first time, it is recommended to charge for another 20-30 minutes after filling
In this way, it can protect the cell of the battery and prolong battery life ( Only for the first charge )
In addition, to avoid accidental injury, it is recommended that you remove the battery when replacing the blade
Dimensions: 17.32 x 6.3 x 2.64 inches
Net weight: 5.56 lbs. Gross weight: 6.26 lbs.
Power: 20V lithium ion battery
Speed: 2A 0-3000SPM Variable Speed
Length: 1" Stroke Length
What’s Included?
Price Comparison
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Warranty
90 days
Estimated Delivery
Friday, Apr 5 - Monday, Apr 8
/giphy huh?
You don’t say.
Meh. If I buy this from you, will you reciprocate and buy something from me?
This battery looks remarkably similar in aesthetic and actual functional design to a WORX battery…
It’s probably just wishful thinking to hope they’d be cross compatible, right?
@breakerswitch all the batteries of same voltage of different brands are essentially the same. In many cases made by the same people.
The difference is the battery casing all deliberately made a little bit different to force you into their “ecosystem”… But you can find adapters for some of the common brands.
You might be able to look on Amazon to see if the have an adapter from Track life to worx. I doubt without an adapter it would work though. Theres probably a plastic nub on the back or something tiny like that that makes an adapter necessary.
@OnionSoup Thanks for the details! That makes sense to me, in the same way that “With a little dremel work, you can play ‘region locked’ Japanese N64 games on your American N64” makes sense.
@breakerswitch @OnionSoup a pair of male & femal spade adapters and some wire is all that is needed yo use batteries from these different 20v chinese tools. I do it all the time. .
@braveit1 @breakerswitch @OnionSoup TBH, the Tacklife 20V looks closer to a DeWalt (5 terminal, inside ridge slide) than a Worx (6 terminal, outside ridge slide).
Better than just extending wires is mounting a common battery dock or adapter in place of the battery shoe. I did this recently to a sub-$20 Einhell polisher – used a sub-$4 Dayi-Makita battery adapter just for the mount. Extended the wires, and now it runs with Makita-ish batteries (from sub-$30 chainsaws).
@breakerswitch @narfcake @OnionSoup even though there are 5/6 slots, you only need 2 connection points (power & ground) to make it work. I"ve also designed & 3d printed adapters when i needed a more permanent connection. But for a quick run, the two wires on a spade connection work fine when my battery died and still needed to finish a task.
@braveit1 @breakerswitch @narfcake @OnionSoup the additional connections are likely used for cell balancing when charging. Some of the systems are smart enough to have the balancing board in the pack. Look for those when doing the nicd upgrade.
@ergomeh NiCad would be a downgrade, not an upgrade.
@narfcake right - upgrade from nicds. Throw out the nicds (recycle) use the cells and bms board from a lithium pack. I have b&d, formerly nicds, tools that are still good (especially the reciprocating saw - sorry meh) and probably better than new with lithium. The tacklife pack is likely gel cells. Look for 18650’s or similar.
@ergomeh I iz confused. These are lithium ion already.
As for the B&D, I use a HPA1820 adapter. Slide it on an old 18V tool with a newer 20V battery; no modding required.
@narfcake The HPA1820 way more practical - I didn’t know it existed.