They keep using that word “drill”. I do not think it means what they think it means. Impact drivers are impact drivers. Drills have a drill chuck. (I’ve groused about it to them directly before, and they fixed it once - and then repeated the original error on every subsequent relisting of this driver.)
They keep using that word “drill”. I do not think it means what they think it means. Impact drivers are impact drivers. Drills have a drill chuck. (I’ve groused about it to them directly before, and they fixed it once - and then repeated the original error on every subsequent relisting of this driver.)
@werehatrack I picked up a $40 $22 Bauer a couple weeks ago as it was actually underrated. Went with a battery adapter instead of adopting yet another battery platform, though.
@narfcake I’m pretty much stuck with the Ryobi battery ecoverse at this point, but since I really don’t have all that much need for the gee-whiz power capabilities of some of the competition, I’m not all that unhappy with the choice.
@werehatrack My go-to are the current Skil PwrCore series, both in 12V and 20V, with the vast majority of them purchased for cheap via Warehouse. Drills, straight and angle impact drivers, circular saws, one handed and regular reciprocating saw, jigsaw, SDS rotary hammer, and oscillating tool. They replaced my set of Porter Cable tools which were still NiCad based.
Outdoor tools are B&D 20V, of which I bought a drill + circular saw kit from Warehouse because it was cheaper than just a battery and charger by themselves. I’ll be using these batteries on the Bauer.
@phendrick Because of a typo in a newspaper article in the '50s, numerous sources online say that one of the indigenous peoples of Southeast Texas had a diet consisting primarily of cotton rates. This caused a certain amount of confusion because nobody knew what the hell a cotton rate was. But it was in the literature, so it must be true!
They keep using that word “drill”. I do not think it means what they think it means. Impact drivers are impact drivers. Drills have a drill chuck. (I’ve groused about it to them directly before, and they fixed it once - and then repeated the original error on every subsequent relisting of this driver.)
/showme 3800 impact rates
@mediocrebot @chienfou Well, that clears it up.
And, it suggests that maybe it was supposed to be 3800 rat-a-tats.
They keep using that word “drill”. I do not think it means what they think it means. Impact drivers are impact drivers. Drills have a drill chuck. (I’ve groused about it to them directly before, and they fixed it once - and then repeated the original error on every subsequent relisting of this driver.)
@werehatrack
ISWYDT…
140 ft-lbs of torque? Really?
I don’t think so.
@werehatrack I picked up a
$40$22 Bauer a couple weeks ago as it was actually underrated. Went with a battery adapter instead of adopting yet another battery platform, though.(I didn’t buy this Tacklife, though.)
@narfcake I’m pretty much stuck with the Ryobi battery ecoverse at this point, but since I really don’t have all that much need for the gee-whiz power capabilities of some of the competition, I’m not all that unhappy with the choice.
@werehatrack My go-to are the current Skil PwrCore series, both in 12V and 20V, with the vast majority of them purchased for cheap via Warehouse. Drills, straight and angle impact drivers, circular saws, one handed and regular reciprocating saw, jigsaw, SDS rotary hammer, and oscillating tool. They replaced my set of Porter Cable tools which were still NiCad based.
Outdoor tools are B&D 20V, of which I bought a drill + circular saw kit from Warehouse because it was cheaper than just a battery and charger by themselves. I’ll be using these batteries on the Bauer.
@narfcake @werehatrack
Can you tell me what battery adapter I would need to charge a Milwaukee tool with a Skil battery? Can I do that?
@Kyeh That I haven’t seen yet.
@narfcake So my best bet would be to just get a Milwaukee replacement battery? The original is dead.
What’s Included?
Warranty
90 days
Estimated Delivery
Monday, Feb 20 - Tuesday, Feb 21
Is that good, bad, or indifferent?
I didn’t realize a “rate” was a unit of measure.
@phendrick Because of a typo in a newspaper article in the '50s, numerous sources online say that one of the indigenous peoples of Southeast Texas had a diet consisting primarily of cotton rates. This caused a certain amount of confusion because nobody knew what the hell a cotton rate was. But it was in the literature, so it must be true!