Ken Nagrod said:
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"
Put a spin on it however you want. If it's deceptive advertising, it's deceptive advertising, any way you look at it. I made no use of the word secret nor did I state they started the fiasco. I merely gave my personal experience in finding out about it. If you're happy with the numbers game, so be it. I'm not. As for Bosch's relabeling, I know that I and others that I worked with at the time thought it was truly new models at a higher voltage. Maybe the product marketing is different or was different in your country than here.
Sorry, I'm not trying to be a spindoctor.
As for the product marketing being different here, I just looked it up, and round here bosch never rebranded that line, the 12v max is a US thing.
I have an almost unhealthy interest in powertools, and frequent a bunch of international forums, this is how I saw the threads of people thinking the other brands were more powerfull because they had a higher voltage, and the press release of the rebranding by bosch... so I guess the marketing worked because I felt a need to respond to your post
(BTW I reread your post above and I do agree with you on those points)
About me being happy with "the numbers game":
The type number of BMW and Mercedes cars used to reflect the cilinder capacity of the engine of those cars, when, somewhere in the nineties, this wasn't the case anymore for some of the models I didn't like it, but it's just the way it is.
Likewise, MHz isn't a good base anymore to compare two different processors.
I can understand your concern for deceptive advertising; on a German forum there was a guy who felt cheated because his festool T15 drill didn't reach the mentioned rpm, the rpm mentioned WAS the max rpm the machine could reach, but only with the older NiMH batteries which were 15.6V, which were also compatible with the drill, but not with the 14.4V li Ion batteries, that came with the drill.
source (in German)
On topic: If it's available where you are I can highly recommend the earlier mentioned protool 18V pdc drill, It has the same brushless motor the festool drills use, centrotec chuck, angle chuck, 4 speed metal gear box(3800rpm in 4th) , and a hammerfunction.
The max torque of the hilti drills mentioned is significantly higher than that of the protool ("only" 60Nm) but they don't mention the weight of the hilti drills on their site (1.9 kg for the protool with centrotec chuck)