Festool drill or Milwaukee?

sae said:
Wuffles said:
This discussion turned circular quite a while back, I expect anyone with any sense un-subscribed ages ago.

Oh, how I wish there was an unsubscribe...

Profile -> Modify Profile -> Notifications...remove yourself from the thread
 
Timtool said:
BeardMan said:
Not right,you compare impact to drill.

And PDC 18/4 can do it better AND MUCH quieter.

And this is fact!

In all fairness [member=55478]Darren1972[/member] does state that for that particular application the impact is better, which is logical and i'm not sure if brand has anything to do with that. It's just a task were in general impacts perform better.
And as far as i was able to understand he prefers his Festool drills for normal drill-driver tasks.

Impact is better?

For some "particular applications" impact is failed and PDC 18/4 just do it much better, easy and quieter.
 
sae said:
Wuffles said:
This discussion turned circular quite a while back, I expect anyone with any sense un-subscribed ages ago.

Oh, how I wish there was an unsubscribe...

Unnotify button at the top and bottom if you're on a normal browser mate. And if I'd pressed it, I'd have missed that  [blink]
 
I love festool drills and drivers i own c12 ,c18 ,pdc ,bhc,all i was trying to get across was when ime driving massive screws in or lag bolts i use my impact driver as its easy on the wrist a lot quicker buy yeah it is noisy never owned a bosch one as i dont like them mine is a millwaulkee fuel m18 and it has never let me down for power 180 nm torque
 
[thumbs up]
Yaaayyy...I think we've finally got it solved...when installing lag bolts or Timberlok screws, it's easier to install the lag bolt and easier on the installer to use an impact drill or impact wrench.

[jawdrop]
Unfortunately we still haven't established whether the OP'er should purchase a conventional Milwaukee drill or a convential Festool drill. [popcorn]

 
Wuffles said:
sae said:
Wuffles said:
This discussion turned circular quite a while back, I expect anyone with any sense un-subscribed ages ago.

Oh, how I wish there was an unsubscribe...

Unnotify button at the top and bottom if you're on a normal browser mate. And if I'd pressed it, I'd have missed that  [blink]

Oh, I don't get notifications, but it shows up in my replies link, which I don't think I can get off of without having someone delete all my posts in this thread.
 
sae said:
Wuffles said:
sae said:
Wuffles said:
This discussion turned circular quite a while back, I expect anyone with any sense un-subscribed ages ago.

Oh, how I wish there was an unsubscribe...

Unnotify button at the top and bottom if you're on a normal browser mate. And if I'd pressed it, I'd have missed that  [blink]

Oh, I don't get notifications, but it shows up in my replies link, which I don't think I can get off of without having someone delete all my posts in this thread.

Ah right sorry, I use "Unread" and not replies. You're knackered then  [blink]
 
Cheese said:
[thumbs up]
Unfortunately we still haven't established whether the OP'er should purchase a conventional Milwaukee drill or a convential Festool drill. [popcorn]

If you refer back to my post #100 or the OP post #1, the question included, 'FT vs Milwaukee drills' (AND/OR) 'Domino or sander'.

I cannot imagine needing to be using an 18v drill on instruments where he is currently using an egg beater or a drill press. I have never seen a timberlock on a cello or a flute.
But I did posted the small 10v drill (and it sinking a timberlock).

Using a Domino on a violin seem equally as out of place... So maybe the answer is behind door #4... "Sander"?
 
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