joinery45 said:..... but it is not a 18V hammer drill.
L.J said:I have an 18 Volt Hilti (Actually 21 Volts )Hammerdrill that is unstoppable for the money. http://www.us.hilti.com/holus/page/module/product/prca_rangedetail.jsf?lang=en&nodeId=-385620
I was hesitant to purchase it at first but it was a good decision that I did.neth27 said:L.J said:I have an 18 Volt Hilti (Actually 21 Volts )Hammerdrill that is unstoppable for the money. http://www.us.hilti.com/holus/page/module/product/prca_rangedetail.jsf?lang=en&nodeId=-385620
I have the same one... [big grin] great drill..
John..
I keep kicking myself about the reciprocating saw,could have had it in a combo for $100 more.Roger Savatteri said:I have the 18 and the 14 volt HIlti Hammer drills,
Great Drills.
,,,,,,,and because you have the 18 volt system.
You could get this,,,,,,,,
http://www.us.hilti.com/holus/page/module/product/prca_productdetail.jsf?lang=en&nodeId=-318042&selProdOid=891945
The picture above does not show the battery which slides in below.
They are great work-lights, without any black dot in the middle of the beam.
And the light spins around, (hmmm,,,,,, imagine your head is the light = looking at your toes and then spins up and back at the person behind you.)
They remind me of miniature theater lights.
On a full charge they get aprox. 16 hours of working time.
They cost about $49 through my rep at HD.
I have four.
btw,
they are due to come out shortly with an 18 volt cordless grinder, as well as some other new tools.
They already have out an 18 volt reciprocating saw and an auto drywall driver.
I agree 100% but the proof is definitely in the pudding and Hilti backs up their products.Ken Nagrod said:Just something to think about with the battery powered tools (again), if you're comparing different drills or saws or whatever, that will obviously give you real-world results, but if you're just comparing specs of one brand to another, the voltages are not always what they seem which affects torque. The amp hour of the battery affects run time. For example, some people are talking about the 18 volt Hilti drill that's really over 21 volts. Maybe it's a weak motor or battery cells and they needed that little extra to compete or maybe they added the extra cells to get more power than other brand's 18 volt drills and marketing is sort of hiding the fact that it's a higher voltage calling it an 18 volt tool. You take those specs and compare it to another company's 18 volt drill and all of a sudden, you don't realize it's like comparing apples to oranges.
Manufacturers also stretch the limits and sometimes the truth on performance specs. I feel it's always best to put little value in specs and more in how the tool feels, looks and performs in your hands. I think the only way you the user will truly be happy is if you take everyone's opinions and marketing hype with a grain of salt and test the product for yourself. -- Is it right for you?
Ken Nagrod said:Don't you love marketing? I first got wind of this when Bosch admitted to me over the phone that their 10.8 volt tools were being rebranded 12 volts to compete with the new lines from other manufacturers.
Frank-Jan said:Ken Nagrod said:Don't you love marketing? I first got wind of this when Bosch admitted to me over the phone that their 10.8 volt tools were being rebranded 12 volts to compete with the new lines from other manufacturers.
Bosch was the first to introduce the 10.8V li-ion tools, when milwaukee introduce theirs they labeled them 12V (allthough they were exactly the same voltage) and people were getting the milwaukee pocket driver, because it was supposed to be higher voltage and the same size. It was after this that bosch rebranded the tools to "12v max" And stated on their websites that they were the same tools as the ones previously sold as 10.8V (and some story about the logic of the other brands that the batteries when fully charged briefly reach a voltage of 12V)
This post is a bit nitpicking, but the people at bosch weren't keeping this a secret to the consumer, the competition started the misleading labeling and having them "admitting" it sounds like they started the "misleading"